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China has been cracking down on foreign firms whose websites list Taiwan as a country. Photo: EPA

Taiwan hotel cuts ties with Marriott in protest at caving in to Beijing in naming row

Marriott changed its listing of the hotel to ‘Taiwan, China’ after the mainland government shut down its local website for a week

Taiwan

The owner of a Starwood-branded hotel in Taiwan said on Thursday it would terminate its contract with Marriott International, in protest over the US group caving in to Beijing pressure to list the island as part of China.

Marriott was strongly criticised by Chinese authorities in January for listing Taiwan – along with Tibet and Hong Kong – as separate countries. All are regions which Beijing claims under its authority.

After the Chinese government shut down Marriott’s local website for a week, the hotel chain apologised and changed the listing to “Taiwan, China” on the simplified Chinese version of a booking website for members.

But the Four Points by Sheraton in Zhonghe, a district of the capital Taipei, announced – in a front-page advertisement in local newspaper the Liberty Times – it will terminate its franchise agreement with the parent group.

“We are sternly protesting against Marriott International unilaterally listing our hotel as ‘Taiwan, China’,” the advert read, adding it would “dissolve” its contract.

Simplified Chinese is used in mainland China. A more complicated traditional version is used in Taiwan and Hong Kong, and on that version of the website the island was still listed as “Taiwan”.

Four Points by Sheraton is a brand of business hotels under the Starwood brand, which was bought by Marriott in 2016.

Lily Cheng, a spokeswoman for the Zhonghe hotel, told Agence France-Presse its name would be changed and it would no longer take reservations from Marriott’s booking system.

“Of course it will cause some impact, but our main customers are corporates, and Taiwanese people, and other booking websites,” she said.

Marriott did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

China is swift to condemn any moves that could be interpreted as de facto diplomatic recognition of the government in Taiwan.

It has taken a number of airlines, hotels and other companies to task in recent months for listing Taiwan as a separate country on their websites.

The foreign ministry lodged an official protest with the US for allowing Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen to transit in Los Angeles en route to Paraguay this week, during which she gave a rare public speech by a Taiwanese leader on US soil.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Taiwan hotel scraps Marriott deal over naming row
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