City
Epaper

'Lithuania needs support of West to counter Chinese aggression'

By ANI | Published: January 02, 2022 11:10 AM

Lithuania needs the support of the West and other foreign powers to counter Chinese aggression as it seems to be struggling almost alone against one of the world's economic and political superpowers, according to a report.

Open in App

Lithuania needs the support of the West and other foreign powers to counter Chinese aggression as it seems to be struggling almost alone against one of the world's economic and political superpowers, according to a report.

According to the Hong Kong Post, Lithuania finds itself at the forefront of countries that identify China as the greatest threat as it dared to openly oppose Chinese President Xi Jinping's autocracy and Beijing's aggressive behaviour.

Tensions have escalated between China and the Baltic nation in recent times after Lithuania took steps to strengthen ties with Taiwan. China considers Taiwan as its integral part.

The tensions erupted between the two countries when in November Lithuania angered China by allowing Taiwan to open a representative office in Vilnius, equivalent to an embassy.

The representative office opened with the name "Taiwan Representative Office in Lithuania", thereby implicitly implying recognition of a legal entity separate from the mainland.

Beijing attacked Lithuania by lowering its diplomatic relations with Lithuania.

In addition, this month Beijing also demanded that Lithuanian officials surrender their identity documents in order to downgrade their diplomatic status.

The demand was such a serious concern for Lithuania that Vilnius withdrew its remaining diplomats from China in mid-December, fearing for their safety.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman noted that this act 'creates a false impression of 'one China, one Taiwan' in the world, violates the one China principle, undermines China's sovereignty and territorial integrity, and grossly interferes in China's internal affairs'.

Further, China has suspended the movement of freight trains connecting Vilnius as part of China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It stopped processing Lithuanian food export license applications, according to Hong Kong Post.

"Lithuania seems to be struggling almost alone against one of the world's economic and political superpowers. It finds itself at the forefront of countries that identify China as the greatest threat as it dared to openly oppose Chinese President Xi Jinping's autocracy and Beijing's aggressive behaviour. It remains to be seen if the world community will come together to stand in support of Lithuania against Chinese coercion," the Hong Kong Post article read.

"The Baltic nation needs the support of the West and other foreign powers to counter Chinese aggression. Washington announced its support for Lithuania's decision. The EU, on its part, warned of further consequences if Chinese pressure on Lithuania continues, but did not specify what the consequences might be," it added.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: beijingVilniusHong kong postTaiwan representative office
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTaiwan’s Attempt to Restrict China Trips by Legislators Fails

InternationalChinese hackers breach emails of US Commerce Secretary Raimondo, State Department officials

InternationalIn the name of assistance, Chinese companies controlling public services in Kenya: Report

InternationalUK parliamentary panel report warns of national security threats from China; calls govt’s approach “inadequate”

PoliticsTurkey to decide on Sweden's NATO bid in line with its own interests: Erdogan

International Realted Stories

InternationalZelensky, European Parliament chief discuss Ukraine's European integration, security

InternationalTurkish minister dismisses claim of easing ban on trade with Israel

InternationalRelationship with India gained tremendous importance for EU: Envoy Herve Delphin

InternationalNetanyahu vows to continue attacks in Gaza despite Biden's threat to halt weapon shipment

InternationalRussian attacks damage 2 hydroelectric power plants in Ukraine