China hosts El Salvador as nations cut ties with Taiwan

AP  |  Beijing 

Salvadoran Salvador Sanchez met with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, in on Thursday, just months after the small Central American nation broke its diplomatic ties with

and the are among a growing number of countries that have cut ties with in favour of resuming or establishing relations with China, which considers the self-governing island democracy to be part of its territory.

Only 17 mainly small, developing countries now recognise Taiwan as a sovereign nation.

Taiwan split from mainland during a civil war in 1949, and has been steadily ratcheting up diplomatic and economic pressure since Taiwanese Tsai Ing-wen took office in 2016.

Beijing's aggressiveness is largely driven by Tsai's refusal to endorse Beijing's "one-principle," which maintains that Taiwan is part of China and that the Communist Party-ruled administration in is China's sole legitimate government.

Taiwan has long been a wedge between China and the United States, which has formal relations with Beijing but maintains robust unofficial military and diplomatic links with the island.

Washington's de facto to Taiwan, Brent Christensen, said Wednesday that the US would be opposed to "unilateral attempts to change the status quo" in Taiwan a reference to increasing Chinese military intimidation.

China's wooing of Taiwan's allies in what the US considers its backyard has rung alarm bells in

The US pulled out its diplomatic envoys last month from El Salvador, and the after those countries cut ties with Taiwan.

At a conference in attended by Salvadoran last month, said and other Central American countries should strengthen bonds with the US "even as countries like China" try to "expand their influence in the region.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, November 01 2018. 16:45 IST