City
Epaper

Taiwan urges China to not undermine its "status quo"

By ANI | Updated: October 20, 2024 05:00 IST

Taipei [Taiwan], October 20 : Taiwan urged China not to undermine its "status quo" by threatening or suppressing it ...

Open in App

Taipei [Taiwan], October 20 : Taiwan urged China not to undermine its "status quo" by threatening or suppressing it by the use of the military, Taipei Times reported

Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA), in a press statement, again asked China to recognise the Taiwan's existence and respect its independence.

MOFA also thanked its allies for addressing China's provocations and showing concern for Taiwan in recent weeks.

"Do not attempt to use military provocations or other methods to threaten or suppress Taiwan and undermine the regional status quo," the ministry said, urging China to resolve their differences through dialogue, Taipei Times reported.

"Maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait is in the common interest of both sides of the Taiwan Strait and the international society," the ministry said.

"MOFA sincerely thanks our allies, the US, the UK, France, Germany, New Zealand, Lithuania, South Korea and more than 30 countries' governments or parliament members, as well as the EU, for publicly expressing their concerns about China once again conducting military drills to intimidate our nation," the ministry added.

Recently, Taiwan has reported Chinese military activities near its territory. On October 19 Ministry of National Defence (MND) has said that 10 Chinese military aircraft and six naval vessels were detected. In response to Chinese military activity, Taiwan sent aircraft and naval ships and deployed coastal-based missile systems to monitor People's Liberation Army (PLA) activity.

In a post on X, Taiwan's MND stated, "10 PLA aircraft and 6 PLAN vessels operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. We have monitored the situation and responded accordingly."

Taiwan has been governed independently since 1949. However, China considers Taiwan part of its territory and insists on eventual reunification by force if necessary.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS, Ukraine reach deal on economic cooperation

NationalHC to hear plea against Robert Vadra on May 2 over remarks on Pahalgam massacre

InternationalSecretary Rubio talks to EAM Jaishankar, reaffirms US commitment against terrorism

InternationalUN chief renews call for immediate cessation of hostilities in Sudan

InternationalPower outage in Dutch city leaves over 20,000 households in dark

International Realted Stories

InternationalJordan hands down 20-year sentences in national security case

InternationalTexas outbreak could upend measles elimination claim by US

InternationalHouthi group says its attacks led to shooting down US F-18 fighter jet

InternationalGermany's SPD members approve coalition agreement

InternationalFuel mismanagement, oversight failures lead to 2023 aircraft crash in Australia: Report