Advertisement
Advertisement
Taiwan
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Pope Francis in St Peter’s Square on Sunday. Photo: AP

Taiwan invites Pope Francis to visit after landmark China-Vatican deal

Invitation follows last month’s landmark accord on appointment of bishops in mainland China

Taiwan

Taiwan has invited Pope Francis to visit, President Tsai Ing-wen has said, just weeks after the Vatican reached a milestone deal on the appointment of bishops with mainland China, which claims the self-ruled island as its own.

Last month’s deal gives the Holy See, Taiwan’s last remaining diplomatic ally in Europe, a long-desired say over such appointments, although both sides call it “provisional” and sources have said some key issues remain unresolved.

Taiwanese Vice-President Chen Chien-jen met Francis on Sunday and invited him to visit, Tsai’s office said in a statement, adding that the Pope had replied he would pray for Taiwan. But it gave no date for the proposed visit.

Vatican signs historic deal with China on bishop appointments

Chen emphasised the provisional nature of the agreement between the Vatican and Beijing, saying it did not involve a “diplomatic element” or affect the friendship between Taipei and the Vatican, the statement added.

“We urge everyone not to excessively interpret and worry about this (deal),” it quoted Chen as saying.

On social media, Tsai thanked the pope for his blessings. “We will take active and concrete actions to support the Pope and to transmit our common values of freedom, justice, peace and care to all corners of the world,” she wrote.

Pope Francis and Taiwan’s Vice-President Chen Chien-jen. Photo: Office of the President Republic of China (Taiwan)

Although the Vatican says its September 22 deal is not political, some Taiwan officials worry it could be a prelude to establishing diplomatic ties with Beijing, and Taiwan’s Vatican envoy has said the mainland wants to make the island irrelevant.

Taipei has routinely accused Beijing, which considers it a breakaway province and has never ruled out the use of force to return it to the fold, of using dollar diplomacy and bullying to lure away its allies, charges Beijing has denied.

This year, former allies El Salvador, Burkina Faso and the Dominican Republic switched ties to Beijing from Taipei, leaving it with just 17 formal allies, mostly less developed nations in Central America and the Pacific.

Senior Vatican officials tell Taiwan ‘not to over-interpret’ deal with mainland on bishop appointments

On October 1, in the first sign of a thaw after the pact, which was more than 10 years in the making, the Vatican said Beijing would, for the first time, allow mainland Chinese bishops to attend a major Vatican meeting.

The synod, began on October 3 and runs until October 28.

However, Michael Yeung, the bishop of Hong Kong, told Reuters it would take time to tackle issues beyond the appointment of bishops and he feared the suppression of Catholics in mainland China would continue despite the accord.

About a dozen bishops and priests, some elderly, remain in detention in mainland China. Some have not been heard from in decades and Beijing has provided little clear information about their fate.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Taipei invites pope to visit after Beijing pact with Vatican
Post