Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍) yesterday hailed the importance of security and economic ties between Taiwan and Lithuania as he met with a delegation of Lithuanian lawmakers in Taipei.
The eight-member Seimas delegation is led by Lithuania-Taiwan Parliamentary Friendship Group chairperson Ruslanas Baranovas, and includes Lithuanian Parliament’s Committee on National Security and Defense chairperson Giedrimas Jeglinskas, and Committee on Foreign Affairs vice chairman Matas Maldeikis, according to a ministry statement.
Taiwan and Lithuania are both on the front line of democracy’s defense against authoritarian expansionism and share a common belief in universal values, Lin was cited as saying.
Photo courtesy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Taipei is willing to work with the Lithuanian government on developing self-defense capabilities, supply chain resiliency, and cooperation in arms, drones and artificial intelligence industries, he said.
The two nations are to continue to strengthen their economic resilience, provide humanitarian aid to Ukraine and maintain unity among the global alliance of democracies, Lin said.
Taiwan in November last year sent a delegation of drone makers to visit Lithuania, leading to a joint venture between the two nations’ uncrewed vehicle industries to manufacture components, he said.
The collaboration in drone parts demonstrated that Taiwan’s and Lithuania’s uncrewed vehicle sectors have complementary capabilities that should be developed, Lin said.
The Lithuanian delegation — the first to visit Taiwan following that nation’s general election in November last year — is a show of Vilnius’ willingness to continue its support of Taiwan and maintain the bilateral relationship, Baranovas said.
The world’s democracies must enhance their cooperation and solidarity to deal with the surge in geopolitical uncertainty, he said, adding that global security could only be maintained if treated as an integrated and inseparable whole.
The two nations’ efforts to deepen bilateral ties in security, economic resilience and culture are building on existing foundations, he said.
Lithuania could serve as Taiwan’s link to broadened participation in Europe-led initiatives, Baranovas said.
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Francois Wu (吳志中) is to host the Lithuanian delegation at a banquet today, the ministry said.
The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) yesterday said it had deployed patrol vessels to expel a China Coast Guard ship and a Chinese fishing boat near Pratas Island (Dongsha Island, 東沙群島) in the South China Sea. The China Coast Guard vessel was 28 nautical miles (52km) northeast of Pratas at 6:15am on Thursday, approaching the island’s restricted waters, which extend 24 nautical miles from its shoreline, the CGA’s Dongsha-Nansha Branch said in a statement. The Tainan, a 2,000-tonne cutter, was deployed by the CGA to shadow the Chinese ship, which left the area at 2:39pm on Friday, the statement said. At 6:31pm on Friday,
The Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy’s (PLAN) third aircraft carrier, the Fujian, would pose a steep challenge to Taiwan’s ability to defend itself against a full-scale invasion, a defense expert said yesterday. Institute of National Defense and Security Research analyst Chieh Chung (揭仲) made the comment hours after the PLAN confirmed the carrier recently passed through the Taiwan Strait to conduct “scientific research tests and training missions” in the South China Sea. China has two carriers in operation — the Liaoning and the Shandong — with the Fujian undergoing sea trials. Although the PLAN needs time to train the Fujian’s air wing and
Taiwanese celebrities Hank Chen (陳漢典) and Lulu Huang (黃路梓茵) announced yesterday that they are planning to marry. Huang announced and posted photos of their engagement to her social media pages yesterday morning, joking that the pair were not just doing marketing for a new show, but “really getting married.” “We’ve decided to spend all of our future happy and hilarious moments together,” she wrote. The announcement, which was later confirmed by the talent agency they share, appeared to come as a surprise even to those around them, with veteran TV host Jacky Wu (吳宗憲) saying he was “totally taken aback” by the news. Huang,
The American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) put Taiwan in danger, Ma Ying-jeou Foundation director Hsiao Hsu-tsen (蕭旭岑) said yesterday, hours after the de facto US embassy said that Beijing had misinterpreted World War II-era documents to isolate Taiwan. The AIT’s comments harmed the Republic of China’s (ROC) national interests and contradicted a part of the “six assurances” stipulating that the US would not change its official position on Taiwan’s sovereignty, Hsiao said. The “six assurances,” which were given by then-US president Ronald Reagan to Taiwan in 1982, say that Washington would not set a date for ending arm sales to Taiwan, consult