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SYDNEY (Pacnews)
Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan is on a tour of the South Pacific, which
includes visits to Australia, New Zealand, Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea.
Beijing is involved in a diplomatic fight with Taiwan, which has close
relations with a number of South Pacific island nations
The presence of such a high-ranking Chinese politician in the South Pacific
shows how important the region is to Beijing. C
ompetition for diplomatic recognition between China and Taiwan is intense
across the Pacific.
Taipei has official relations with six island nations, including Kiribati,
Tuvalu and the Solomon Islands. The tiny republic of Nauru recently opened
an embassy in Taiwan which calls itself the Republic of China.
Taipei has formal diplomatic relations with only 24 countries around the
world.
China, which considers Taiwan a renegade province, has established
diplomatic ties with eight South Pacific governments, among them the largest
island nations, Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
Researcher Joel Atkinson from Melbournes Monash University said
both China and Taiwan use aid to exert influence.
Virtually everything Taiwan does is in response or as a kind of
attempt to out-maneuver what Chinas doing and vice-versa,
he explained. A lot of the time it comes down to China and Taiwan
attempting to out-bid each other in order to establish or maintain their
relationships.
Analysts believe money was the prime motivation for governments in the
South Pacific to switch sides and that allegiances can be switched if
the price is right. The other key issue is access to the vast regions
lucrative reserves of fish, minerals and timber.
Australia and New Zealand both recognize China, but are wary about the
ambitions of both China and Taiwan in their backyard, fearing that outside
interference and money could unsettle an already unstable region.
The competition has already directly affected political stability in the
Solomons, when the government divided last year over split loyalties between
Taipei and Beijing.
China has persuaded Vanuatu to shift loyalties from Taipei to Beijing,
causing a change of government in its wake, as occurred in Papua New Guinea
seven years ago. In 2003, China lost the allegiance of Kiribati to Taiwan.
Despite these concerns both Australia and New Zealand see China as one
of their most valuable trading partners. Vice-Premier Zeng Peiyan has
visited Australia and New Zealand before heading to Vanuatu and Papua
New Guinea.
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