Former Taiwan president Tsai to visit Canada next week, sources say

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FILE PHOTO: Former Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen speaks during the annual Forum 2000 conference in Prague, Czech Republic, October 14, 2024. REUTERS/Dorota Holubova/File Photo

Ms Tsai is planning to visit Nova Scotia and deliver a speech at the Halifax International Security Forum conference.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Former Taiwan president Tsai Ing-wen is planning to visit Canada next week, two diplomatic sources told Reuters, in a highly watched visit for a senior Taiwan politician who has a become a symbol of the island’s defiance against China’s military threat.

Canada, like most countries, has no official diplomatic ties with Chinese-claimed Taiwan, but the economic and political exchanges between the two sides have increased as Beijing ratchets up military threats against the democratic island.

Ms Tsai, who stepped down in May, is planning to visit Nova Scotia and deliver a speech at the Halifax International Security Forum conference, which begins on Nov 22, two diplomatic sources told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the matter.

Ms Tsai’s office said in response to questions that if details of travel plans for her are confirmed, it will announce it at an appropriate time. It did not elaborate.

Neither the Halifax Forum nor Canada’s Global Affairs department responded to requests for comment sent outside of Canadian office hours.

China firmly opposes the visit and urges Canada to abide by the “one China” principle and take “concrete actions” to safeguard bilateral relations, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told a news briefing.

Canada has a difficult relationship with China, including

accusations from Canada about Chinese hacking attacks

which Beijing denies, and disputes over human rights and trade.

Ms Tsai’s travel plan to Canada and the forum was first reported by Taiwan media.

Ms Tsai in October visited the Czech Republic, France and Belgium in a sensitive trip due to concerns of Chinese espionage and harassment.

Current Taiwan President Lai Ching-te fully supported her European visit, calling her the “best spokesperson” for the democratic island on the international stage.

Under Ms Tsai’s watch, Taiwan’s government greatly boosted military investment and deepened unofficial relations with major countries, including the US and Japan, to China’s ire.

Ms Tsai remains a senior and influential member of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party as a senior spokeswoman, and her overseas visits are closely watched by diplomats in the region.

China staged two rounds of war games around Taiwan during Ms Tsai’s second term in office – in 2022, after

then US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taipei

, and in 2023, after Ms Tsai returned from a visit to the US, where she met Mrs Pelosi’s successor Kevin McCarthy. REUTERS

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