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China-EU relations
ChinaDiplomacy

Keeping big brothers at bay: why Lithuania is taking on China

  • The opening of a de facto Taiwanese embassy in Vilnius is the latest source of friction between the Baltic nation and Beijing
  • Lithuania’s stand is informed by both the struggles of the past and fears for the future

Reading Time:7 minutes
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Illustration: Perry Tse
Finbarr Berminghamin Vilnius

It does not look like much from the outside: a nondescript office block in central Vilnius, a stone’s throw from the Neris River cutting through Lithuania and Belarus.

But tucked away on the 16th floor is a small diplomatic office that has become the epicentre of a geopolitical dispute that threatens to upend the European Union’s relationship with China.

This is the Taiwanese Representative Office in Lithuania, the first de facto embassy in Europe to bear the name “Taiwan”, and just 3km (2 miles) north of the much grander Chinese embassy.
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The office’s launch date had been a closely guarded secret, until November 18 when, without notice, the Taiwanese government announced it was open for business.

However, there was little of the usual fanfare.

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There were no press conferences, nor official opening ceremonies – due to a tacit understanding with the Lithuanian government and American embassy in Vilnius, according to people familiar with the arrangement.

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