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ChinaPolitics

Signs of thaw in Taiwan’s international isolation after historic summit with mainland China

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Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou and Xi Jinping greet each other at the Singapore summit. Photo: Kyodo
Bloomberg

Taiwan has begun to feel a tangible, if nascent, ease in its long international isolation in the days since President Ma Ying Jeou’s historic handshake with his mainland counterpart, Xi Jinping earlier this month.

With a series of trips and exchanges, neighbours appear to be testing the boundaries of Taiwan’s space on the world stage after Xi ended the seven-decade estrangement and signalled it might no longer be taboo to meet with leaders from the self-ruling island.

“Closer ties between Taiwan and [mainland] China have helped increase opportunities for Taiwan to participate in international events and activities with dignity,” said Liao Da-chi, a professor at National Sun Yat-sen University’s Institute of Political Science.

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“What’s worth observation next would be whether the development can increase the odds for Taiwan to participate in international organisations as a political entity.”

READ MORE: ‘We are brothers’: Xi hails closer ties with Taiwan as closed-door talks with Ma wrap up at historic Singapore summit

The Xi-Ma meeting in Singapore on November 7 was not only significant as a demonstration of the flourishing trade ties between the two former civil war foes. It also gave the island of 23.5 million a chance to assert itself as part of the global community.

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