President Xiomara Castro announced that the Republic of Honduras will seek to establish diplomatic relations with China, which would imply severing relations with Taiwan.
“The President of Honduras, Xiomara Castro, has announced that her country, one of just 14 sovereign states to maintain formal ties with the island of Taiwan, will seek to establish diplomatic relations with mainland China instead.
Castro tweeted on Tuesday that she instructed Foreign Minister Eduardo Reina ‘to manage the opening of official relations with the People's Republic of China’ to join the rest of the world in ‘expanding the borders with freedom’.
If the Central American country proceeds with the plan, it will likely have to break off its relations with Taiwan, as Beijing refuses to maintain diplomatic ties with states that recognize Taiwan in breach of its ‘one-China’ policy.
Taipei has yet to comment on the announcement publicly, but a source within its foreign affairs department said officials were ‘in the process of ascertaining the situation’, according to the Central News Agency.
Honduras may join the list of over a hundred states which have switched diplomatic relations from Taiwan to the People’s Republic of China over the decades. Nicaragua switched its diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 2021, following the Solomon Islands in 2019, while the Dominican Republic and El Salvador cut ties with Taiwan in 2018. Panama abandoned its diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 2017.
Currently, only a handful of nations recognize Taiwan as a sovereign country, including Guatemala, Paraguay, Belize, Haiti, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Nauru, the Marshall Islands, Palau, Tuvalu, Eswatini, and the Holy See.
Beijing considers Taiwan to be part of its sovereign territory and has vowed to peacefully reunify with the island while reserving the right to use military force if necessary”. -RT
Without being in an alliance with any NATO members, now that the Honduran government has severed ties with Taiwan, there remain only thirteen countries with formal diplomatic relations with Chinese-claimed Taiwan.
Ditching Taipei for Beijing is a wise idea for any world leader who sees the writing on the wall with regard to Taiwan’s reunification with mainland China.
Central America has been a key diplomatic battleground for China and Taiwan since the two split in 1949 after a civil war which is why, in recent years, China has stepped up investment in Latin American countries.
With more countries considering pursuing diplomatic and trade relations with mainland China, Taiwan's isolation will only deepen under Beijing's "One China" principle that no nation is allowed to maintain official diplomatic ties with both China and Taiwan.