Germany has told China to stop threatening Europe as Merkel hardens her stance toward Beijing

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Germany has told China to stop threatening Europe, a sign of its hardening approach toward Beijing.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas warned his Chinese counterpart "threats have no place here" after Beijing threatened a Czech politician who this week visited Taiwan.

Beijing wants to reclaim Taiwan, a self-governing country that broke away in the mid-20th century.

Maas said China should expect Germany and European allies to represent their "interests more confidently."

He used his meeting with the Chinese diplomat Wang Yi to pressure Beijing on Hong Kong and its treatment of Uighur Muslims.

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Germany has told China to stop threatening Europe after Beijing said a politician from the Czech Republic who visited Taiwan this week would pay a "heavy price" for expressing support for the self-governing island facing Chinese subjugation.

Milos Vystrcil, the president of the Czech Senate, infuriated China by becoming one of the few senior European Union politicians to visit Taiwan. He told its parliamentarians "I am a Taiwanese," in what was interpreted as a reference to John F. Kennedy's anti-communist "Ich bin ein Berliner" speech of 1963, The Times of London reported.

President Xi Jinping wants to reclaim Taiwan, a self-governing country in Southeast Asia, after it broke away from China in the mid-20th century. China has said it is prepared to retake the island by force, if necessary.

On his visit to Taiwan this week, Vystrcil said: "I am convinced that it is the duty and obligation of every democrat to support all who defend democratic principles and who often find themselves building democracy under difficult conditions.

"I wish you an independent, true and just future. It is in your hands."

Heiko Maas, the foreign minister in Chancellor Angela Merkel's government, on Tuesday stood up for Vystrcil, telling his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, that "threats have no place here" and that Europeans stood together "shoulder to shoulder."

"We treat our international partners with respect and expect them to do precisely the same in return," he said.

Speaking after his meeting with Wang, Maas said Europe would not back down and allow itself to "become a political football in the great-power rivalry between the US, Russia, and China."

"At the moment I am trying to make it clear to everyone I talk to ... that they must brace themselves for Europe to represent its interests more confidently," he said in comments reported by The Times of London.

In a sign of Germany's hardening position toward China, Maas used his meeting with Wang to urge Beijing to remove the draconian national law it recently imposed on Hong Kong and allow United Nations officials to observe the treatment of detained Uighur people in China, the report said.

Wang is touring European capitals ahead of a meeting between Xi and EU leaders later this month.

lexiekon on September 2nd, 2020 at 14:19 UTC »

You guys all should check out the Czech mayor's response to China that blew through reddit yesterday. Fucking hilarious

delarussieavecamour on September 2nd, 2020 at 14:13 UTC »

German foreign minister Heiko Maas warned his Chinese counterpart "threats have no place here" after Beijing threatened a Czech politician who this week visited Taiwan.

Heiko Maas, the foreign minister in Angela Merkel's government, on Tuesday stood up for Vystrcil, telling his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi "threats have no place here" and that Europeans stood together "shoulder to shoulder."

Germany acting on a threat against the Czech Republic

Increasingly we see leaders of European states speaking about Europe rather than their home state. Refreshing and a good sign for building a common foreign policy/strategic culture I think, especially given the upcoming (and first) EU joint threat assessment

autotldr on September 2nd, 2020 at 14:00 UTC »

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 71%. (I'm a bot)

Germany has told China to stop threatening Europe after Beijing said a Czech politician who visited Taiwan this week would pay a "Heavy price" for expressing support for the self-governing island facing Chinese subjugation.

Milos Vystrcil, the president of the Czech senate, infuriated China by becoming one of the few senior European Union politicians to visit Taiwan.

In a sign of Germany's hardening position towards China, Maas used his meeting with Yi to urge Beijing to remove the draconian national law it recently imposed on Hong Kong and allow United Nations officials to observe the treatment of detained Uighur people in China, the report said.

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