Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Gambian President Adama Barrow before a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China September 6, 2018. Lintao Zhang/Pool via REUTERS |
Gambian President Adama Barrow told Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday that his countryโs previous ties with self-ruled Taiwan had been a โhuge mistakeโ, and he thanked China for all the help it had given subsequently, China said.
China resumed ties with Gambia in 2016, after it ended formal relations with Taiwan, claimed by China as a wayward province with no right to diplomatic relations.
Two other African countries have since followed suit, Sรฃo Tomรฉ and Prรญncipe and Burkina Faso.
China has stepped up pressure on Taiwanโs remaining allies – now down to just 17, most of them poor countries in the Pacific and Central America – as it seeks to limit the democratic islandโs international footprint.
Meeting Xi in Beijing following this weekโs China-Africa summit, Barrow told Xi that his country had been wrong to maintain relations with Taiwan.
โThe facts prove that Gambia previously maintaining so-called diplomatic relations with Taiwan was a huge mistake,โ Chinaโs foreign ministry cited Barrow as saying.
โChina has helped us improve communications, roads and transport conditions, things that in all the years gone past we wanted to do but were unable,โ he added.
Barrow said he โbelieved that with Chinaโs cooperation, Gambia will achieve speeded-up developmentโ, the ministry said.
For years, China and Taiwan have tried to poach each otherโs allies, often dangling generous aid packages in front of leaders of developing nations.
The kingdom of eSwatini, formerly known as Swaziland, is Taiwanโs only remaining African ally. It has shown no desire to ditch Taipei even as China steps up efforts to woo it.
Chinaโs renewed diplomatic tussle with Taiwan has also dragged in the United States. While Washington only recognises China, it has strong unofficial relations with Taiwan and is its main arms supplier.
Last month, the United States attacked El Salvadorโs decision to abandon Taiwan in favour of China, saying the change was of grave concern and warning that China was offering economic inducements to seek domination.