《TAIPEI TIMES》 Tsai vows new ways of working with Eswatini
President Tsai Ing-wen, right, meets with Swazi Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Thulisile Dladla, left, at the Presidential Office yesterday in Taipei. Photo: CNA
MUTUAL ASSISTANCE: The president said she hoped to see more businesspeople from Taiwan use Eswatini as a base for entering Africa, creating greater cooperation
By Stacy Hsu / Staff reporter
President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) yesterday pledged to explore new cooperation with Taiwan’s sole African diplomatic ally, the Kingdom of Eswatini, as she met with the country’s first female foreign minister.
Swazi Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Thulisile Dladla, who arrived in Taiwan on Sunday for a five-day visit, met with Tsai at the Presidential Office Building in Taipei yesterday morning.
“Being of the female gender myself, I fully understand what a remarkable achievement it is,” Tsai said in a speech, referring to Dladla’s inauguration as Eswatini’s first female foreign minister in November last year.
Tsai, who was sworn in as Taiwan’s first female president in May 2016, said that she believed under Dladla’s leadership the friendship and partnership between Taiwan and eSwatini would become closer than ever.
Despite the geographical distance between the two nations, Taiwan and Eswatini see no obstacles in their friendship, Tsai said, adding that the two governments would not only make an effort to maintain existing partnerships, they would also seek to explore new ones.
Recounting her visit to Eswatini in April last year to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the independence of the African country and the establishment of diplomatic ties between Taiwan and Eswatini, Tsai said that the energetic Swazi culture left a lasting impression on her.
“During the visit, I also witnessed the fruits of our bilateral cooperation in medicine, education and trade,” Tsai said.
In addition to technical cooperation, she said she hoped to see more Taiwanese businesspeople use Eswatini as a base to enter Africa, which would create an environment of mutual reciprocity and mutual assistance.
Eswatini became Taiwan’s only African diplomatic ally after Burkina Faso severed ties and switched recognition to Beijing in May last year.
Taiwan has lost four other diplomat allies to China since Tsai’s inauguration: El Salvador; Sao Tome and Principe; Panama; and the Dominican Republic.
Amid speculation about his country potentially switching recognition to China, Swazi King Mswati III visited Taiwan in June last year and has repeatedly pledged his country’s loyalty to Taiwan.
新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES
%http://www.taipeitimes.com/
《TAIPEI TIMES》 AIT head opens joint astronomy exhibition at museum
上一則新聞:《TAIPEI TIMES》 Local game developer pulls ‘Devotion’ from Steam amid boycott by Chinese
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 MND plans suicide drone production
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Texas governor announces Taiwan trade office
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Ex-Examination Yuan VP tipped to replace Japan envoy
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 SEF’s Cheng Wen-tsan steps down amid probe
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 PFAS in consumer products can enter through skin: study
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Taiwanese chocolatier defies smell blindness
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Taiwan marching band wins hearts
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Government to subsidize egg freezing
焦點今日熱門