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European Parliament vice-president Nicola Beer has arrived in Taiwan on a three-day visit. Photo: Facebook

EU lawmaker opens Taiwan visit with vow to ‘stand firm’ with Taipei

  • European Parliament vice-president Nicola Beer cites Ukraine and Hong Kong as she arrives on first ‘official’ visit to the island
  • Beer also calls Taiwan and Europe part of a ‘family of democracies’
Taiwan
A senior EU lawmaker arrived in Taiwan on Tuesday with a message that Europe must support the island’s democracy, citing both Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Beijing’s crackdown in Hong Kong.

Nicola Beer, one of the European Parliament’s vice-presidents, is making what the Taiwanese foreign ministry described as “the first official visit” by an MEP of her rank.

EU to upgrade Taiwan trade ties as China warns against ‘gambling’ on issue

She told reporters upon arriving that “now is the moment to stand firm on the side of Taiwan”, calling Europe and the island part of a “family of democracies”.

“Taiwan’s bloom is also Europe’s bloom. We won’t have a blind eye on China’s threats to Taiwan. Europe was late for Hong Kong, we won’t be late for Taiwan,” she said, referring to Beijing’s recent dismantling of Hong Kong’s democracy movement.

“There is no room for Chinese aggression in democratic Taiwan. For the moment, we witness war in Europe; we do not want to witness war in Asia.”

Taiwan’s 23 million people live under the constant threat of invasion by mainland China, which claims the self-ruled island and has vowed to one day seize it.

Russia’s assault on Ukraine has deepened fears both within Taiwan and among key Western allies that Beijing might do the same under President Xi Jinping.

Beer’s visit is likely to upset China, which opposes any official exchanges between Taiwan and foreign politicians.

But Beer said “political need” brought her to Taiwan in her “official capacity”.

Last year, Beijing condemned a visit to Taiwan by a European Parliament delegation led by French MEP Raphael Glucksmann, a vocal China critic who was among five lawmakers sanctioned by Beijing.

Beer, a lawyer and a member of Germany’s liberal Free Democratic Party, is scheduled to meet President Tsai Ing-wen and other top officials during her three-day visit.

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