Taiwan snubbed by UN aviation agency amid impasse with China

Taiwan has not been invited to the assembly meeting of a United Nations aviation agency, the latest sign of the pressure China is bringing to bear on the new independence-leaning government of the self-ruled island it views as a renegade province.

Diplomatically-isolated Taiwan is not a member of the United Nations, which recognises China. China, in turn, sees wayward Taiwan as fit to be taken back by force if necessary, particularly if it makes moves toward independence.

The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) said arrangements for the assembly, scheduled from Sept. 27 to Oct. 7 in Montreal, did not follow the pattern ahead of a previous such meeting in 2013 when China had asked for Taiwan to be invited.

“ICAO follows the United Nations’ ‘One China’ policy,” the agency’s communications chief, Anthony Philbin, told Reuters in an email. “While arrangements had been made for their attendance at the last (38th) session of the assembly, there are no such arrangements for this one.”

Taiwan’s foreign ministry and presidential office are expected to issue statements on the matter later on Friday.

China’s foreign ministry was not immediately available for comment.

China’s refusal to let Taiwan attend the meeting is politically symbolic. It comes as China pressures Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen to concede to Beijing’s cherished ‘one China’ principle, which implies Taiwan is a part of China.

Since May, when Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party, which traditionally favours independence from China, took power, China has suspended official communication channels with Taiwan, despite the island’s request to maintain a dialogue.

A rapprochement between China and Taiwan in the previous eight years, when the island’s government was run by the China-friendly Nationalists, has started to fade under the DPP.

After Tsai’s January election win, China resumed ties in March with the small west African state of Gambia, a former ally of Taiwan, signalling an end to an unofficial diplomatic truce.

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