TAIPEI: Czech senate president Milos Vystrcil poses for a group photo before delivering a speech at the main chamber of Taiwan’s legislature on Tuesday.—Reuters
TAIPEI: Czech senate president Milos Vystrcil poses for a group photo before delivering a speech at the main chamber of Taiwan’s legislature on Tuesday.—Reuters

TAIPEI: A senior Czech politician invoked a famous Cold War-era phrase by late US president John F Kennedy as he delivered a landmark speech to Taiwan’s parliament on Tuesday during a visit that has incensed Beijing.

Czech Senate speaker Milos Vystrcil channelled Kennedy’s 1963 challenge to communism when he declared “Ich bin ein Berliner” to West Berlin citizens worried about the Soviet Union’s looming presence behind the Iron Curtain.

Kennedy “used the phrase ‘Ich bin ein Berliner’ to show his support for the people of Berlin and the highest values of freedom”, Vystrcil said.

“Maybe I can be more humble, but allow me to use the same determined phrase to conclude my speech in your country’s parliament, in Taiwan — I am Taiwanese.” His final declaration — “I am Taiwanese” — was delivered in Mandarin and received a standing ovation from lawmakers on the self-ruled island.

As a precaution against coronavirus he gave his speech wearing a facemask, which was decorated with the flags of the Czech Republic and Taiwan.

Vystrcil is leading a 90-member delegation to Taiwan that Beijing has slammed as a “despicable act”.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi warned on Monday that Vystrcil would “pay a high price for his short-sighted behaviour and political speculation”, while Beijing summoned the Czech ambassador.

Prague then summoned Beijing’s ambassador in response to Wang’s comments.

Beijing’s authoritarian leaders view Taiwan as part of China’s territory and have vowed to seize the island, by force if necessary.

It has tried to keep Taiwan diplomatically and economically isolated from the rest of the world, especially after the election of President Tsai Ing-wen in 2016.

She rejects Beijing’s idea that Taiwan is part of “One China” and views the island as a de facto sovereign nation.

The Czech government accepts Beijing’s “One China” policy and does not send official delegations to the island.

But Vystrcil is a member of the right-wing opposition Civic Democrats and is not bound by the protocol.

The delegation, including politicians, entrepreneurs, scientists and journalists, will meet Tsai on Thursday as part of their five-day trip.

Vystrcil said his visit was a way to highlight Czech sovereignty as his country “should not listen to the orders of another country, especially a non-democratic country”, a clear reference to Beijing.

He said the Taiwan visit did not violate Czech’s interpretation of the “one China” principle. “We are not against the People’s Republic of China,” he told reporters.

“We also hope to have good, equal and mutually beneficial ties with the PRC, and similarly equal and mutually beneficial ties with Taiwan.” Taiwanese parliamentary leader Yu Shyi-kun called Vystrcil’s visit a diplomatic breakthrough for Taipei that helps prove its existence to the international community. “He does not yield to threats, intimidations and the lure of incentives...I believe that many countries will learn from Czech in the future,” Yu said.

Vystrcil has said his trip follows in the footsteps of late Czech president Vaclav Havel, the dissident leader of the 1989 Velvet Revolution which toppled communism in the former Czechoslovakia. Havel visited Taiwan in 2004, once he left office.

Published in Dawn, September 2nd, 2020

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