Czech officials visit Taiwan as China threatens retaliation

Czech Senate President Milos Vystrcil (front left) is greeted by Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu as he arrives for delivering a speech at National Chengchi University in Taipei yesterday

The Czech Republic’s top legislator yesterday told an economic forum in Taiwan that freedom and democracy are the basis of prosperity, on the second day of a visit that has drawn vows of retaliation from Beijing.
Senate President Milos Vystrcil is leading a delegation of 89 leaders from the Central European country’s political, business, artistic and academic circles on a trip aimed at boosting contacts.
Taiwan relies on such exchanges to counter China’s efforts to isolate the self-governing island that Beijing claims as its own territory, to be annexed by military force if it deems necessary. Like all but 15 countries, the Czech Republic has no formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, but maintains robust informal contacts.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian yesterday said Beijing would not “sit idly by and let go of the public provocation of the Czech Senate speaker and the anti-China forces behind him.”
“They must pay a heavy price for their short-sighted behavior and political opportunism,” Zhao told reporters at a daily briefing.
Vystrcil spoke at an economic forum where the two sides signed agreements on high-tech manufacturing and environmental management.
“I believe that without the possibility of free cooperation between entrepreneurs and employers, there will be no freedoms and democracy in the Czech Republic or Taiwan, because freedom and democracy are the basis of prosperity,” Vystrcil told participants.
Taiwan Economics Minister Wang Mei-hua said the delegation’s visit was bringing real economic benefits to the two sides.
Wang said the visit also stood as “proof to the world that no matter how big the pressure is, how difficult the situation is, nothing can stop Taiwan and the Czech Republic’s determination to defend freedom, democracy and protect human rights.”
Taiwan’s high-tech companies are major investors in the Czech Republic, while the island’s robust democracy marks a stark contrast to China’s authoritarian Communist Party system.
During his visit, Vystrcil is to meet with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, who is detested by Beijing for her assertions of the island’s independence.
Vystrcil’s six-day visit to Taiwan was prompted in part by complaints from the Czech side that China was introducing unwanted political elements into their relations.
Prague and Beijing severed sister city relations after China refused to remove language from the agreement dictating that the city’s government endorse the “one-China principle” that defines Taiwan as part of China.
Vystrcil’s predecessor, Jaroslav Kubera, had planned to travel to Taiwan, angering pro-China Czech President Milos Zeman.
Kubera died in January before making the trip and Vystrcil said China’s pressure, including a warning from the Chinese Embassy against congratulating Tsai on her reelection, contributed to his decision to travel to the island. AP

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