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South Africa has ordered Taiwan’s representative office to relocate outside of the capital, a Taipei Foreign Ministry official said Friday, blaming Chinese pressure for the decision.
China considers self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory and has sought to whittle down the number of countries that recognize its claim to statehood.
“We have been asked to move our representative office out of the capital [Pretoria],” an official from Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry told AFP on condition of anonymity.
“Our reasonable conclusion is that it is part of a series of actions by China to suppress Taiwan,” the official said. “We are still negotiating with South Africa in the hope that there will be room for change.”
The official did not say when Pretoria issued the order or when the deadline was for Taiwan to move its office.
South Africa’s Foreign Ministry defended the decision in a statement, saying it had been “mischaracterized” and was meant only to reflect Pretoria and Taipei’s “nonpolitical and nondiplomatic” relationship.
The Taipei Liaison Office, which is set to be rebranded as a trade office, “will be appropriately placed in Johannesburg, South Africa’s economic hub,” said Chrispin Phiri, South Africa’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson.
“This also aligns with standard diplomatic practice that capital cities are the seats of foreign embassies and high commissions,” he said.
According to the Foreign Ministry, the South African Liaison Office in Taipei will also rebrand as a trade office.
Taiwan’s semi-official Central News Agency said Thursday that South Africa issued the order on October 7 and gave the representative office until the end of the month to move.
According to Pretoria, Taipei was given six months.
China said Friday that South Africa had made the “right decision.”
“Taiwanese independence advocates do not enjoy popular support and are doomed to failure,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said.
Taiwan has 12 diplomatic allies, with most nations, including South Africa, instead recognizing Beijing.
In 2017, Nigeria ordered Taiwan to shut down its trade office in its capital, Abuja, in what Taipei said was an attempt by Beijing to push it out of the country.
Relations between Beijing and Taipei have been fraught for years and have spiked since Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te took office in May. Lai is more outspoken than his predecessor in defending Taiwan’s sovereignty, with Beijing calling him a “separatist.”
On Monday, China deployed fighter jets, drones and warships to encircle Taiwan in the fourth round of large-scale military drills in just over two years.
Taipei condemned Beijing’s actions as “irrational and provocative,” and the island’s key backer and biggest arms supplier, the United States, called them “disproportionate.”
Beijing said the drills were a “stern warning to the separatist acts of ‘Taiwan Independence’ forces.”