Last Updated on Sunday, 7 March 2021, 14:32 by Denis Chabrol
President Irfaan Ali has reaffirmed the “excellent” relations between Guyana and China just over one month after this South American nation’s diplomatic blunder to approve the establishment of a Taiwan investment office here.
“President Ali said that the gesture further emphasized the excellent relations between Guyana and China,” he said in referring to China’s donation of 20,000 vaccines last week.
The statement was issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Within 24 hours of the announcement by the United States embassy here and subsequent confirmation by Guyana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Guyana government back-pedaled its decision after a protest by China.
Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo is on record as saying that the green-lighting of the Taiwan office in Guyana should never have happened and Cabinet had never discussed it.
Guyana was the first Caribbean country to have recognised China more than 50 years ago
President Ali reportedly told China’s President Xi Jinping that “the gesture was an expression of China’s commitment to assist the countries of the world to combat the global pandemic and for vaccines to be seen as a public good.”
China considers Taiwan a renegade province, but the United States is a strong supporter of Taiwan.
Experts on the Guyana-Venezuela border controversy have, however, reasoned that Guyana could not afford to abandon China which is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. Conceivably, if Venezuela takes military action action against Guyana over that Spanish-speaking neighbour’s claim to the Essequibo Region, the experts the issue could reach the Security Council.