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Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Ralph Gonsalves, left, and President of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-wen during Tsai's official visit to SVG on July 16, 2019. (Photo: Lance Neverson/Facebook)
Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Ralph Gonsalves, left, and President of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-wen during Tsai’s official visit to SVG on July 16, 2019. (Photo: Lance Neverson/Facebook)
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As he was about to leave St. Vincent for an official visit to Taiwan on Wednesday, Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves called China to desist from conducting military exercises near Taiwan.

“I want to say that the government of St. Vincent and Grenadines (SVG) is calling upon the People’s Republic of China, to desist from the military exercises, designed to threaten or intimidate the people of Taiwan,” said Gonsalves, who will make a one week visit to Taiwan, after spending two days in the New York.

China has announced military exercises near Taiwan following Wednesday’s visit to Taipei by Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi amid opposition from Beijing.

While many Taiwanese welcomed the visit, a small groups of protesters, including those who support unification with China, stomped on American flags and held up signs disparaging Pelosi and urging the U.S. delegation to go home, the Washington Post reported.

Gonsalves, speaking on the state-owned NBC Radio, from Argyle International Airport, as he prepared to depart St. Vincent, said that SVG, which has had diplomatic relations with Taiwan since 1981, believes in the peaceful settlement of disputes.

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“There has been a dispute since 1949, between mainland China and Taiwan. Both peoples of Taiwan and of Mainland China are part of the Chinese civilisation,” Gonsalves said.

He added:

“But a civilisation can have different political expressions and there are different legitimate political expressions of the Chinese civilisation finding themselves in the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of China on Taiwan.

“And whatever the challenge, the contradictions, the difficulties, the problems between those two peoples in those two territories of the same civilisation, it is for them to sort out their problems peacefully.”

China claims Taiwan, a self-ruled island of 23 million people, as a part of its territory and has pledged to use military force if Taipei declares independence.

SVG is among 14 states that currently recognise Taiwan as an independent nation.

The prime minister said that Beijing’s response to Pelosi’s visit was “surely excessive”, adding, “… all this sabre-rattling, it does nothing for world peace.

“It does nothing for peace against the Taiwan Strait. It does nothing for the reconciliation of peoples in the same civilisation with separate, legitimate political expressions; does nothing to aid any resolution of any conflict.”

He said that China’s actions “exacerbates the problem … and the spillover effect on the rest of the world, given all the turmoil already in the world, in the global political system, in the global economy, exacerbated already by the war in Ukraine and now worsening tensions across the Taiwan Strait”.

Gonsalves said that such military aggression affects people not just directly within the Chinese civilisation but also countries as far away as SVG.

The prime minister he would write to the Chinese government “to desist from this sabre-rattling and to desist from conduct, which, by any reasonable reflection, would be intimidatory and a threat to the people of Taiwan and to peace and security across the Taiwan Strait and in East Asia and the world.

“Let us settle our disputes peacefully and it is better to be talking and talking than warring and warring. So that is my plea this morning.”

Gonsalves said that in Taiwan his delegation will meet the President Tsai Ing-wen and other high level officials.

“This is my 11th visit to Taiwan, my tenth as prime minister. I am not going to allow any tensions there to prevent the visit, or to hold me back from visiting a friend and ally because of the action of the People’s Republic of China.

“We have important business to transact with the Republic of China on Taiwan and that’s what I’m going there for. And I am hopeful that the Mainland Chinese would respect what I’m saying.”

The prime minister said people had asked him if he was not afraid to travel to Taiwan at this time “with the mainland Chinese threatening and intimidating and the like.

“I said, ‘No, because we can’t have this kind of a conduct in international relations. Even if persons said there was no necessity or desirability for Nancy Pelosi to go there now, the point is this if even if you were to say that, this reaction is completely overboard by the mainland Chinese. That’s our view.

“‘And surely the Speaker of the House of Representatives could go and visit where she wants to go and visit once the place you’re going to welcome them. We have to stop fighting these old battles in this irrational kind of a way.”

Pelosi in Taiwan
U.S. House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, in Taipei, Taiwan, on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022. (Photo: Annabelle Chih/Getty Images/New York Times).

SVG defends ‘self determination  … sovereignty … independence’

He said that Kingstown and Beijing work well in several regional and international organisations and at the United Nations, including at the Security Council, when SVG was a non-permanent member for the 2020-2022 term, the Caribbean Development Bank, Community of States of Latin America and the Caribbean, and CARICOM — a 15 member regional bloc, one firth of which — Belize, Haiti, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, and SVG — recognise Taiwan as a country independent of China.

“We don’t have diplomatic relations with Mainland China, simply because the mainland Chinese set a condition that to have relations with them, I have to break relations with Taiwan. Well, you can’t set preconditions for us; we are an independent country.

“If they drop that condition, well, then we will have formal diplomatic relations. But you can’t tell me to abandon a friend in order to come and have diplomatic relations with you. That’s entirely unacceptable. We wouldn’t accept it from the United States or Britain or anybody else for that matter. And we’d defend self-determination of peoples and their sovereignty and their independence.”

Gonsalves said that in the way that he opposes the United States “in any actions which there have been” against Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, he is calling “for dialogue and peace, without precondition” between Beijing and Taipei.

“I’m saying the same thing to the mainland Chinese: have dialogue without precondition with your neighbour, the people of the same civilisation, the same Chinese civilisation, who reside in Taiwan and have made that place, that locale, that country their home.

“And to be threatening this way, looks bad for mainland China. It looks and it is clearly excessive in all the circumstances and subversive of regional peace in that area and world peace, generally.

“I am going to see our friends in Taiwan and we will further strengthen our relations. And in those regional or international organisations in which we are members and mainland China are members, we will work together on the matters upon which we agree and we will agree to disagree on those things which we cannot agree. But we will have respectful, intelligent conversations.”

Gonsalves said he wanted the people of Taiwan to know that SVG continues “to be in solidarity with them and for the peaceful settlement or any disputes between themselves and the brothers and sisters across the Taiwan Strait on mainland China”.

He said that SVG supports “the one Chinese civilisation policy, not a one China policy, because from the one civilised nation, you can have different legitimate political expressions. And you do have them, for example, on mainland China and Taiwan.

“That’s our position, very simple, it’s straightforward and logical. And to the extent we can be helpful in any way, we will continue to be that way without any confrontation with anybody.”

‘It’s unworthy of a great civilisation’

He said he has been speaking about  “these ancient battles” inside of St. Vincent, the region, and globally, “where people have nuclear weapons and every other artillery of a non-conventional kind”.

Gonsalves said that the 23 million people in Taiwan are “building their own society as a first world country.

“They came virtually from nowhere. They have a thriving democracy. Like all societies they have all kinds of contradictions and challenges but they’re doing quite well. And the people’s views are represented in the government and they have their form of government, it’s a participatory democracy.”

He asked listeners to consider how frightening it must be for ordinary people going about their daily lives in Taiwan.

“We can’t have that in civilised relations. It’s unworthy of a great civilisation, of a great Chinese civilisation and I am pleading with the leadership in mainland China, to rethink and pull back and talk and resolve these challenges,” he said.

Gonsalves noted that the conflict between Taiwan and China is over 70 years old even as the Chinese civilisation is over 5,000 years old. 

“ … let’s face it, you don’t think they will resolve this problem, they have resolved so many over their years –5000 plus years. This will be seen as a blip in the whole historical process. And we have to cut out all the big power vanities and the like and just be reasonable and talk.”

He said it is the same way in which he speaks  “when the Americans are overbearing in relation to Cuba as they are, and in relation to Nicaragua, and in relation to Venezuela.

“The Americans may agree with me about what I am saying now about Taiwan and the Chinese mainland Chinese would agree with me  — what I talked about the Americans in relation to Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua. Well, I must be right on both counts,” Gonsalves said.

7 replies on “Gonsalves urges China to cease aggression towards Taiwan”

  1. China is a wicked evil communist country. The day Saint Vincent and the grenadines do business with China it going to be the end of our country. China will loan a country billions of dollars they know the country cannot repay then they took and control all the important things of that country.

  2. Ralph, you are the prime minister of a small island of 110.000 people, half of them jobless, a quarter live a foreign seeking a better life. The rest of the blacks are second class in the Grenadines. You are a big fan of the latin American dictators. The royal cops can’t solve a case. You debt is twice your GDP. You want to play big as if you on par with Nancy Polosy and Putin. Half of vincy can’t eat three square meals. More than half of what you say is bogus. […]

  3. What u flying around d world looking for? Monkeypox? Yea go get it, bring it back then declare a health emergency so u can get pity an then d big bucks roll in, freeness. That’s all u have going for u. Amids d crisis in that region U think d cow going get wipe of d planet so u going quick to see if u can get d last milk to bring back to boost d economy? U need to sit down a yard and use your oversize brain on how to get d economy working for its citizens not just your supporters.
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  4. wtf Ralph is trying for do. not even Australia or India of the UK saying a word. delusional jackass.

  5. This is simply one thing i disagree wiih my party the Ndp.The upper echelon of the party is playing hopschotch with the issue of one China policy in the intrest of political hand out. They are not listening to even its own people, they would rather do like Judas and sell thejr soul for 30 pieces of silver. The Ndp position with respect to Taiwan not a pnncipled position. The comrade is right on this one , one cannot trust mInland Chinese. Why betray a true friend Ndp decision makers? St Vincent had bdnefited tremendously from relationship with Taiwan.

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