Taiwan drops annual UN bid as China relations warm

Taipei, September 04: Taiwan will drop for the first time in 17 years its annual bid to join the United Nations as island President Ma Ying-jeou seeks peace with long-time rival and UN heavyweight China, the Foreign Ministry said on Friday.

Taiwan, recognised by only 23 countries, failed in its previous 16 consecutive UN membership bids due to objections from China, which has claimed the self-ruled island as its territory since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949.

China, a UN Security Council member, opposes Taiwan’s participation in any international body that requires statehood as a condition for membership.

“We’re not making a proposal this year,” said Taiwan Foreign Ministry spokesman James Chang. “That decision is based on our taking a look at the overall situation.”

Taiwan would normally make a public display in September by asking its allies to introduce a formal proposal to the UN General Assembly, which would quickly quash it.

Efforts to join the United Nations under ex-president Chen Shui-bian, who had a stormy relationship with Beijing, prompted strong opposition from China and also displeased the United States, which feared heightened cross-Strait tension.

The island’s ties, particularly trade and transit links, with Beijing have improved since Ma took office in May 2008 and dropped government activities likely to upset China.

“Ma wants to keep relations going (with China), and UN applications are not good for those relations,” said Alex Chiang, international politics associate professor at National Chengchi University in Taipei.

Taiwan, formally the Republic of China, was expelled from the United Nations in 1971 in favour of the People’s Republic.

Taiwan is designing a publicity campaign this year to replace the UN proposal, Ministry officials said.

–Agencies