Taiwan rejects permits for two Hong Kong officials as visa row escalates

Beijing views Taiwan as part of a single China and has never renounced the option of using of force to bring the island under its control. PHOTO: REUTERS

HONG KONG (REUTERS) - The Hong Kong government said on Tuesday (July 21) that Taiwan had rejected the visas of two of its officials, underscoring rising bilateral tensions after Taipei criticised a security law imposed on the financial hub by Beijing.

The two Hong Kong Economic, Trade and Cultural Office (HKETCO) staff members have returned home after their permits for residence in Taiwan were rejected, the government's Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau said.

It declined to specify if the visas were existing ones or documents relating to new applications.

Taiwan's China policy Mainland Affairs Council declined to confirm the visa rejections, but said Taiwan needed to react accordingly to "defend the nation's dignity" based on equal and bilateral considerations, following "unreasonable limitations"set by the Hong Kong authorities.

The acting chief of Taiwan's de facto consulate in Hong Kong returned to Taiwan last Thursday after refusing to sign a document supporting Beijing's claim on the island under its "one China" policy as a condition for his visa renewal.

A senior Taiwan official told Reuters last Friday that Taiwanese officials in Hong Kong had been told their visas would not be renewed unless they sign the document.

Beijing views Taiwan as part of a single China and has never renounced the option of using of force to bring the island under its control.

The Beijing-drafted law for Hong Kong, which took effect last month, punishes what China broadly defines as subversion or collusion with foreign forces with up to life in prison. It has been widely condemned abroad.

Taiwan's China policy making Mainland Affairs Council did not immediately respond late on Tuesday to a request for comment on the visa rejections.

According to Hong Kong media, HKETCO had 13 staff positions in Taiwan. It was unclear which two of them had left.

The Bureau said its work to promote economic and cultural exchanges between Hong Kong and Taiwan was still ongoing and had not been "seriously affected at the moment" by the visa rejections.

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