Chinese state media accuse Taiwan of sour grapes after ally poached
Taipei should stop complaining after the Dominican Republic established ties with Beijing and accept it is part of an irresistible trend, says the People’s Daily
Taiwan has a case of sour grapes, Chinese state media said on Wednesday, after the self-ruled island accused Beijing of using a US$3-billion aid pledge to persuade the Dominican Republic to switch long-standing diplomatic ties to mainland China.
Beijing, which denied there were any economic preconditions for establishing relations with the Caribbean nation, says Taiwan is simply a wayward Chinese province with no right to state-to-state ties.
Taiwan’s government says the Dominican Republic accepted false promises of aid from Beijing. A Taiwan official told Reuters Beijing had dangled a package of investments, financial assistance and low-interest loans worth at least US$3.1 billion to the country, which shares an island with Haiti to the west.
The overseas edition of China’s ruling Communist Party’s People’s Daily said Taiwan’s governing Democratic Progressive Party was unfairly trying to cast aspersions on the move.
“Once again they are playing the shirking responsibility game of laying the blame on others, creating tragedy and inciting confrontation, slandering the Dominican Republic’s choice of China with an axe to grind,” it wrote in a front-page commentary.
However, it added, the real story was that the Dominican Republic abandoned Taiwan because that was the irresistible trend of the times and what the people demanded.