China, in a UN letter made public Wednesday night, strongly
condemned an attempt by "very few" countries to request the UN
General Assembly to consider the so-called question of "Taiwan's
application for United Nations membership."
The letter from Chinese UN Ambassador Wang Guangya to
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was in response to a letter submitted
earlier by the Solomon Islands and a very few other countries to
the UN chief. These countries asked the forthcoming session of the
General Assembly to consider "Taiwan's application for United
Nations Membership."
This is "a blatant attempt to clamor for and create 'Taiwan
independence'" and is "absolutely preposterous," Wang said in the
letter dated Aug. 17.
It "wantonly tramples on the purposes and principles" of the UN
Charter and General Assembly resolution 2758, "seriously violates
China's sovereignty and territorial integrity, gravely intervenes
in China's internal affairs and seriously hurts the feelings of the
1.3 billion Chinese people," Wang said.
"The Chinese government and people strongly condemn and firmly
oppose such an act," Wang continued.
Since 1993, the General Committee of the successive sessions of
the General Assembly have all flatly refused to include the
so-called issue of "Taiwan's participation in the United Nations"
in the agenda of the General Assembly, he said.
This has fully demonstrated the determination of the vast number
of UN member states to safeguard the UN Charter and General
Assembly resolution 2758, and also shows that the Taiwan
authorities will never obtain international support in their
attempt to split China by raising the so-called issue of "Taiwan's
participation in the United Nations," Wang said.
China values its relations with all UN member states and has
never done anything harmful to the interests of the cosponsor
countries, but those countries, on the question of Taiwan, have
been repeatedly undermining the national interests of China and
hurting the feelings of the Chinese people, he said.
Their act has also gravely obstructed the work of the General
Assembly and wasted the precious resources of the United Nations
and its member states, he said.
"We strongly urge those countries to change their positions,
strictly abide by" the UN Charter and General Assembly resolution
2758, and "identify themselves with the great number of member
states on the Taiwan question," Wang added.
(Xinhua News Agency August 31, 2007)