China warned Washington not to “play with fire”
TAIPEI: China warned Washington not to “play with
fire” on Wednesday as a US delegation wrapped up a historic trip to the
self-ruled island of Taiwan.
Beijing has been
infuriated by the highest-profile visit in
decades to Taiwan, which it sees as part of its territory, as US-China
relations plunge to a record low over a range of issues from trade to military
and the coronavirus pandemic.
Health chief Alex Azar
finished a three-day visit to Taiwan, during which he criticised China’s
handling of the pandemic and visited the shrine of a former Taiwan president
hated by the Communist Party leadership.
Beijing slammed the visit
on Wednesday and said it “firmly opposes official exchanges between the US and
Taiwan under any pretext”.
“On issues involving China’s core interests, some
people in the US must not harbour illusions, those who play with fire will get
burned,” said foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian at a regular press
briefing. “I would also like to remind the Taiwan authorities not to
be...subservient to others, to rely on the support of foreigners, and to be
bent on pursuing independence, which is a dead end,” Zhao said.
Beijing insists that
Taiwan — which has been self-ruled since 1949 — is part of “one China” and has
vowed to react with force if it ever formally declares independence.
On the last day of the
trip, Azar visited a shrine to Taiwan’s late president Lee Teng-hui on
Wednesday, praising his role in steering the island’s transition to democracy.
The US cabinet member
wrote a message of condolence for Lee, who died last month aged 97.
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