Macau–Taiwan relations
Map indicating locations of Macau and Taiwan | |
Macau |
Taiwan |
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Diplomatic mission | |
Macau Economic and Cultural Office | Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Macau |
Macau–Taiwan relations refers to the bilateral relationship between Macau and Taiwan. At present, it is part of cross-strait relations and is under the jurisdiction of the Mainland Affairs Council of the Republic of China, and the Macau Office of the Mainland Affairs Council operates in Macau in the name of the Taipei Economic and Trade Representative Office to handle bilateral affairs between the Macau Special Administrative Region and the Taiwan region. In contrast, the Macau SAR Government set up the Macau Economic and Cultural Office in Taipei, the seat of the Taiwan authorities, which was suspended on 19 June 2021 due to poor cross-strait relations.
The offices of the Taiwan authorities in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and the Macao Special Administrative Region are the only two administrative organs in the mainland, Hong Kong, and Macau regions.
History
[edit ]Macau and Taiwan were both under the influence of the Portuguese Empire: Macau was ruled by Portugal for more than 400 years; Taiwan was discovered by Portugal, and Formosa is the foreign name of Taiwanese Portuguese.
On December 3, 1966, the "12-3 incident" broke out in Portuguese Macau, as a result, the institutions and organizations set up or supported by the government of the Republic of China and the Chinese Kuomintang in Macao were closed down, and the influence of the Chinese Kuomintang in Macao was eliminated. On December 25, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China lodged a protest with Portugal over the transfer of seven anti-communist figures to the Government of the People's Republic of China in Portuguese Macao. On January 6, 1967, the pro-Taiwan "Macau Federation of Trade Unions" was closed down, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China once again protested to Portugal. On January 11, Wu Wenhui, chargé d'affaires in Portugal, was recalled; On January 30, Portugal and Macao signed an agreement with the government of the People's Republic of China, agreeing to repatriate refugees who fled from Macao, close down Taiwan institutions, and agree to escort eight anti-communist figures to the territory of the People's Republic of China, and then forward the fifth protest to the Portuguese side. On February 21, Liu Chieh, the representative of the Chinese People's Republic to the United Nations, lodged a protest with the United Nations.[1] : 731 However, Taiwan and Portugal did not break off diplomatic relations until 1975. Today's Macau–Taiwan relations are largely based on Taiwan's relations with Hong Kong, but in recent years, more and more people have come to Taiwan/Macau to study or work, and exchanges between Taiwan and Macau have increased, and in recent years, the number of Macau tourists to Taiwan has also increased, so the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Macau has launched a lot of preferential benefits for Hong Kong and Macao residents, and the Taiwan government refers to Hong Kong and Macao as Hong Kong and Macao, which is different from Chinese mainland.
In January 2019, due to the failure of the Macau Government to issue a work visa, the new head of the Mainland Affairs Council in Macao, Zhang Duoma, could not take up his post as scheduled. In April 2020, Acting Commissioner Li Peiru also returned to China after refusing to sign a letter of commitment to China.[2]
On 16 June 2021, the Macau Government announced the temporary suspension of operations of the Macau Economic and Cultural Office in Taiwan from 19 June 2021.[3] According to the Macau Government, the renewal of the documents of the personnel of the Taiwan office and the application for the new rotation of personnel to go to Taiwan have not been approved, and the Taiwan office has no choice but to suspend operations.[4]
On August 1, 2024, the MAC pointed out that the Macau Government still refused to issue visas to the remaining two MAC members in Macao on the grounds that "Taiwan refused to sign the one-China letter of commitment", and could not send new members. The MAC called on the Macao Government to remove unnecessary obstacles as soon as possible, and stressed that it would prepare for the worst.
At the end of October 2024, the Hualien Branch and Ji'an Branch of the Hualien County Police Department cracked three cases of fake investment fraud drivers, one of which was a Macao national, and the whole case was transferred to the Hualien District Prosecutor's Office for investigation according to fraud.[5]
See also
[edit ]- Foreign relations of Macau
- Foreign relations of Taiwan
- Hong Kong–Taiwan relations
- China–Portugal relations
- Macau–mainland China relations
References
[edit ]- ^ 呂芳上總策畫,朱文原、周美華、葉惠芬、高素蘭、陳曼華、歐素瑛編輯撰稿 (2012). 《中華民國建國百年大事記》. 台北: 國史館. p. 731. ISBN 978-986-03-3586-6.
- ^ "拒簽「一中承諾書」 4名駐港人員被迫返台". Archived from the original on 2020年07月19日. Retrieved 2020年07月23日.
- ^ "澳门特区政府在台湾澳门经济文化办事处暂时停止运作" . Retrieved 2021年06月16日.
- ^ "澳门特区政府就在台湾澳门经济文化 办事处暂时停止运作回应传媒查询" . Retrieved 2021年06月16日.
- ^ "澳門人遠赴花蓮當詐騙車手 遭警埋伏逮人". 2024年11月08日. Retrieved 2024年11月13日.
External links
[edit ]- 在台灣澳門經濟文化辦事處官方網站 (页面存档备份,存于)(繁體中文)
- 台北經濟文化辦事處 (页面存档备份,存于)(繁體中文)