News: June 2006 Archives

By REUTERS | The New York Times
June 28, 2006

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday voted to lift some decades-old restrictions limiting contacts American government officials can have with Taiwan.

With little debate, the House approved the measure in an amendment to a funding bill for the State Department. The bill has not yet been considered by the Senate, which must also approve the changes.

Any easing of restrictions was expected to be strongly opposed by China, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province and works to limit any formal links between the island and Washington.

A spokesman at China's embassy in Washington said: ``We hope the U.S. government will abide by the one-China policy.'' Under that policy Washington switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979.

Rep. Thomas Tancredo, the conservative Colorado Republican who pushed the amendment through the House, said: ``These guidelines needlessly complicate our ability to effectively communicate with our friends in Taiwan.''

The amendment did not address other restrictions in place since 1979 limiting visits by Taiwanese officials to the United States.

It would end State Department restrictions, in place since the United States established diplomatic relations with mainland China, that prevent high-ranking American military officers from traveling to Taiwan.

Also prohibited now are meetings between civilian U.S. and Taiwanese officials in certain government buildings, such as the White House and State Department.

Rep. Frank Wolf, a Virginia Republican who is an outspoken critic of Beijing's human rights policy, said, ``There are 40 Catholic bishops and priests in jail in China and zero in jail in Taiwan.'' He added that maybe U.S. policy ought to be reversed so that communications restrictions are placed on Beijing instead of Taiwan.

Iris Ho, spokeswoman for the Formosan Association for Public Affairs in Washington, said Wednesday's vote marked a ''historic step in the U.S.-Taiwan relationship'' because it was the first time a chamber of the U.S. Congress voted to overturn the limitations.

``We have so many arcane restrictions from the U.S. side,'' Ho said, that ``impair our ability to have a more balanced viewpoint in the Taiwan Straits.''

She noted that under current U.S. regulations, Taiwan government officials cannot send letters to American counterparts using an official letterhead.

The Senate could debate the issue later this summer or in the fall.

Readers' Comments

  • goodguy: 中国目前还是个发展中国家,快速的经济发展导致了很多问题,比如环境污染,血汗工厂,贫富差距,但请问哪个发展中国家没有这些问题呢,如果拿个放大镜无限夸大这些问题是没有意义的.那些满口仁义... [more]
  • Ahmed Mustafa: Africans are to blame for accepting this dirty chinese in thier continet. They only export ... [more]
  • 匿名: 我也不知道说什么,反正我们真的什么也不知道,但是我们觉得有很多的真的是太残忍了。比如计划生育的政策,很多的农民因为这样子的多生了一个孩子而全家被杀死或者全村人都去坐牢了。我们也不知道... [more]
  • bjfans: you foreginers. CHINA will get stronger be careful do not infuriate chinese!... [more]
  • han: This just shows that how China cannot exist within a vacuum. Everything is inter-related. Y... [more]