February 11, 2009 4:56 PM

Tiny Caribbean Nation Feels China's Wrath

(AP)  This tiny Caribbean island may have thought it was no big deal when it severed its 10-year relations with China and restored ties on Tuesday with rival Taiwan. Wrong.

China, which built a stadium and was finishing a psychiatric hospital here and considers Taiwan a renegade province, called the move a "brutal interference in China's internal affairs." In short order, one of the world's smallest nations has now made an enemy out of one of the largest.

Both Taiwan and China, which for more than 20 years have battled for diplomatic allies, brought out their big guns to curry favor with St. Lucia, a verdant, mountainous 240-square-mile island that is home to 168,000 people.

China, a vast nation of 1.3 billion people, sent its foreign minister for a two-day visit in September. Taiwan dispatched Foreign Minister James Huang in late April. On Tuesday, he and St. Lucian Foreign Minister Rufus Bousquet signed an agreement establishing diplomatic relations.

"We have been very careful about making this decision, and now that we have taken it, we do not expect the Chinese will love us any more for it," Bousquet said. "But we expect that they will conduct themselves in a manner that is acceptable to our government."

Bousquet had indicated that any decision would be based on which suitor could offer a better deal to St. Lucia, where some 20 percent of the population lives in poverty.

As he put it in April: "Support those who give you the most."

Nationalistic pride in St. Lucia, which won independence from Britain in 1979, also played into the equation.

"St. Lucia did not win its sovereignty from one power to be now dictated to by another as to who its friends should be," the weekly St. Lucia Mirror said in an editorial. It added that Beijing's One China policy cannot "be legally or diplomatically thrust on St. Lucia, as though we, too, were a colony of China."

St. Lucia indicated last week that if it resumed relations with Taiwan, it would still want to be friends with China. The Chinese Embassy sent a rebuff on Friday, saying China does not accept "double recognition."

China, which had established relations with St. Lucia 10 years ago, was apoplectic at Tuesday's reversal.

"We express indignation and opposition," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua News Agency.

Shelley Rigger, a professor of East Asian politics at Davidson College in North Carolina, said the stakes are higher for Taiwan, but both China and Taiwan play fiercely.

"Every diplomatic setback and step forward for Taiwan is important," said Rigger.

He said China's foreign policy is based on the idea that "there's no space for Taiwan in the world."

That little St. Lucia has angered the colossus recalls the satirical movie and novel "The Mouse That Roared" — about a tiny country that tries to invade the U.S. so it can lose and accept foreign aid.

Only St. Lucia doesn't even have an army.

To retaliate, China cannot very well cart off the sports stadium, named last year for the late George Odlum, who courted China as foreign minister in 1997. Chinese workers also constructed several buildings for an industrial free-trade zone.

It is a given that the planned cultural center will not be built by China. And work has suddenly slowed on the nearly finished 104-bed psychiatric hospital.

Ties with China did not improve the lot of many St. Lucians. The last 10 years have seen a handful of Chinese businesses open on the island, mainly restaurants and shops. But St. Lucia has not seen the predicted influx of Chinese tourists.

For its part, Taiwan propagated new strains of fruits and vegetables and introduced agricultural techniques during its time here.

Bousquet said Taiwan has agreed to help St. Lucia diversify its agriculture sector, boost tourism, develop livestock and create information technology learning centers, all of which fit into the government's plans to combat poverty.

St. Lucia maintained diplomatic relations with Taiwan for 13 years under Prime Minister John Compton. His party was defeated in 1996, and the following year St. Lucia recognized China. Compton's return to power in December's elections also marked the beginning of Taiwan's comeback, even though China pledged more money and technical assistance.

St. Lucia's recognition of Taiwan is the first win for Taiwan in some time in its diplomatic rivalry with China. In 1969, Taiwan had full relations with 67 countries, including the U.S. and much of Western Europe. Until Tuesday, that number had dwindled to just 24.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 49 Comments
by phwtb100 January 12, 2012 8:05 AM EST
by mgunn89512 December 8, 2011 9:01 AM EST
I buy American, but i'm not going to fail to recognize the benefits of competition. The ONLY reason our American products are only a little bit more expensive is because the chinese one is sitting right next to it. Mark my words, this mom & pop concept is BS, if china weren't there we'd be gouged by our own, just look at accountants and lawyers fees who have no foreign competition.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I have to disagree with you on this one, for two VERY big reasons.

First, this country was BUILT with those Mom and Pop shops. Price gouging isn't, and never was, a settlement in that fact.

And secondly, I happen to be one of those you are referring to. I do accounting and I do NOT price gouge. I actually work at a very reduced rate, probably less than you make, because I ONLY work with those mom and pop shops who are going broke trying to compete against the huge corporations. Not only do I work with them, and for them, I also TEACH them how to do exactly what I do so they don't have to continue to pay me to do it. Every field of service has their bad guys, just like every field has their good guys.

You cannot condemn the attorneys who work at Legal Aide.
You cannot condemn accountants who give their services away for free to the senior citizens and fixed income recipients.
You cannot condemn doctors who work in small tiny clinics in the middle of nowhere.

Some of us still have ethics AND honor.

Granted, I do see your point, and I somewhat agree with you but I would be more inclined to name doctors, medical facilities and their attorneys on the price gouging thing. If you want to point the finger, point it to the ones who feed off of those people who are simply trying to stay alive and point your finger at the manufacturers who are the ones killing them. THOSE are your bad guys.
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by venusvegasvada January 1, 2012 3:33 AM EST
China just can't leave Taiwan alone can they? Almost like a bunch of spoiled children. They have a huge country and population and seemed to obsessed with little Taiwan. I think it shows a lot of immaturity on China's part and it's more than a little scary.

I agree with the other comments here on sending our jobs to China, we need to really pull back on that. It's killing us in more ways than one. Taiwan has been a good friend for many years, how sad would it be if our Govt. just threw them under the China bus one day?
Reply to this comment
by audemus December 19, 2011 2:09 PM EST
St Lucian: 20% live in poverty

United States: 50% live in poverty

mmmmm...
Reply to this comment
by mrbgibs November 26, 2011 5:11 PM EST
The Mouse That Roared, Great choice St. Lucia, China can just go Screw it's self, and with over a Billion People it sounds like it doe's it quite a bit, I suggest everyone stay away from Condom's made in China.
Reply to this comment
by amos333 December 6, 2011 7:10 PM EST
What a disgusting comment.
by mgunn89512 December 8, 2011 8:58 AM EST
This "wrath" is nothing. Just think what we do to poor countries that did nothing to us (Iraq) or or infiltration worldwide of many countries supporting armed opposition groups, etc. The chinese can be credited with basically doing what they should do... voice discontent, perhaps reduce trade, and that's it, quite peaceful actually.
by euge005 November 19, 2011 7:32 PM EST
Good for them, Tiawan is after all the only legitinate Chinese government. Shame all the corporations got our government to sell out the free people of China so long ago. Lets follow suit. Time for the mainland dictators to give up power before their real revolution starts and free Tibet while they are at it.
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by venusvegasvada January 1, 2012 3:29 AM EST
+1
by phwtb100 November 19, 2011 10:19 AM EST
Funny how, what should be construed as simply common sense, can be so 'whey laid' by the government, diplomats, taxing agents and welfare recipients, isn't it?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"As he put it in April: "Support those who give you the most."..."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I think St. Lucia is a courageous country for 'taking off' China. They have worn their cloak long enough. If only the American people WOULD learn from St. Lucia. Americans have the ultimate power on all of China's imports: If you would STOP BUYING THEM, they won't be here.

But do we do that?
No. We don't.

Instead we sit back and gripe (on our Chinese cell phones) about the news report we just heard, (on our Chinese computer/TV) while we are all stretched out on our Chinese recliner or office chair, regarding another 1000 people losing their jobs in Detroit.

I'm SICK to death of listening to people complain about losing all the US jobs to China!!! STOP BUYING THEIR JUNK AND FIX THE PROBLEM!

Of the $287.8 billion in American imports from China in 2006, the following product categories had the highest values.

Computer accessories, peripherals and parts ...US$28.9 billion (10.1% of China to U.S. exports, up 12.4% from 2005)

Miscellaneous household goods (e.g. clocks) ... $26.5 billion (9.2%, up 17.2%)

Toys & sporting goods (e.g. bicycles) ... $22.2 billion (7.7%, up 10.2%)

Computers ... $17.4 billion (6%, up 20.2%)

Non-cotton household furnishings & clothing ... $14.6 billion (5.1%, up 11.3%)

Video equipment (e.g. DVD players) ... $14.5 billion (5.0%, up 34.9%)

Household furniture ... $13.2 billion (4.6%, up 14.3%)

Footwear ... $10.7 billion (3.7%, up 11.1%)

Cotton household furnishings & clothing ... $9.9 billion (3.4%, up 29.6%)

Telecommunications equipment ... $8.3 billion (3.0%, up 23.7%)

Can you even fathom what those numbers are now???
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by euge005 November 19, 2011 7:37 PM EST
I hear you bro, try to find most of those products made in this country. The sold out corporate bosses made sure you cannot. And donated a nice share to the GOP to keep it that way.
by netjunkie1 November 25, 2011 12:00 PM EST
Its' called industrial sabotage. The US cannot manufacture these goods anymore because of unfair labor practices, unfair foreign government manipulation, and American corporate manipulation.
We can demand quality products instead, stop buying cheap toys.
Demand regulation on inported food. Tariff tax when China cheats, and they have cheated allot.
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by tbweb May 3, 2007 10:36 PM EDT
Agnim wrote:

EXACTLY!

Seems to wiser minds that IMPRISONING AND KILLING INNOCENT Americans should be of far more concern than dam dead body of Chinese prisoners thousands of miles away, which the lowly bacteria will devour anyway!
Posted by Agnim at 05:30 PM : May 03, 2007

--Agnim

What do you mean EXACTLY! as if I was agreeing with you? I was not agreeing with you! I was being sarcastic! Dead body parts? Listen to you! Just saying dead body parts sounds nasty! You talk about the dead body parts the Chinese are selling for profit likes its normal or something. The idea of killing prisoners and using their body parts in any context without the permission of the prisoner or their family is disgusting. What a nasty topic, the next thing you'll be telling is someones a s s will taste better with hot sauce on it or something! Just shut up about it, it gives me the creeps! You nasty Agnim, you probably want to try some too! Eewwwww LOL
Reply to this comment
by agnim May 3, 2007 8:44 PM EDT
"Agnim - seeing as you're trying to start a fight ...
Posted by akrk33nnn at 01:35 PM : May 03, 2007"

My arguments are that devastating, eh? LOL
That will teach you to tangle with someone when you are obviously going to be over matched! LOL
Reply to this comment
by agnim May 3, 2007 8:30 PM EDT
"Look, maybe this is making a big deal out of nothing like you say, ...
Posted by tbweb at 04:17 PM : May 03, 2007"

EXACTLY!

The US has more than its fair share of IMPRISONING AND EXECUTING INNOCENT AMERICANS!

Seems to wiser minds that IMPRISONING AND KILLING INNOCENT Americans should be of far more concern than dam dead body of Chinese prisoners thousands of miles away, which the lowly bacteria will devour anyway!

It's far less likely that a Chinese prisoner is going to be railroaded into Chinese prisoners, as SO MANY INNOCENT AMERICANS are railroaded into American prisons!

Therefore, the family should see to it that their family member uphold the law of the land.
I'd only be concerned about the prisoner if he was likely to be innocent.

But the carcass of a murderer is being elevated if some STUPID AMERICANS will buy the Chinese dead body parts! And ARE alleged to be buying the body parts! So quit with the hypocrisy when Americans are themselves trading in Chinese body parts!

Who knows, you might be one of the cannibals who have devoured the dead Chinese body parts. Your logic is like its coming from a near corpse. LOL
Reply to this comment
by tbweb May 3, 2007 7:17 PM EDT
Agnim wrote:

Who the hell cares what is done with dead-body parts?

Posted by Agnim at 12:25 PM : May 03, 2007

hmmm let me see, you think maybe the family? I'm sure if the family is lucky enough to get whats left of the chopped up body back it would be a closed casket funeral, won't be pleasant to look at. Look, maybe this is making a big deal out of nothing like you say, I guess as long as the Chinese don't mix BODY PARTS with the MELAMINE GLUTEN and start shipping that mix we should not be concerned.
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