Taiwan’s foreign minister says Chinese pressure on countries over the island is a ‘new normal’
Taiwan said two delegates were detained for more than 20 hours after Kenya denied them entry, and the rest of its delegation withdrew.
- On Monday, two Taiwanese delegates to the Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa were detained for over 20 hours after Kenyan officials confiscated their passports and mobile phones, denying them entry to the event.
- Kenya defended the decision, citing a foreign policy that "recognizes only one China," while Taiwan's Foreign Ministry accused Beijing of pressuring Kenyan organizers to exclude the delegation.
- Taiwan's Foreign Minister Lin Chia-Lung denounced the incident on Wednesday as part of "the new normal" of Chinese pressure, calling for international partners to resist Beijing's diplomatic tactics.
- Following the detention, the entire Taiwanese delegation withdrew from the conference, prompting Oceans Affairs Council Minister Kuan Bi-ling to warn that such exclusions weaken the international community's maritime response capacity.
- This incident reflects broader patterns: in April, three countries withdrew overflight permissions for Taiwan's president over Chinese pressure, and Beijing forces Taiwan to compete at the Olympic Games as "Chinese Taipei.
23 Articles
23 Articles
Kenya Bars Taiwanese Delegation From Conference, Taiwan Claims Move Was Pressured by China
Already a subscriber? Make sure to log into your account before viewing this content. You can access your account by hitting the “login” button on the top right corner. Still unable to see the content after signing in? Make sure your card on file is up-to-date. Taiwan has accused Kenya of detaining and deporting members of its delegation to an international oceans conference, blaming Chinese pressure. Some shit you should know before y…
China Accused of Bullying as Taiwan Delegates Barred from Global Ocean Conference in Kenya
Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. According to The Taipei Times, the controversy emerged after Taiwanese academics, who had been officially invited by Kenyan authorities, travelled to Kenya and attended a pre-conference exchange event where they presented research and policy reports. However, the delegates were later denied access to the main conference after Kenyan officials refused to recognise their Taiwanese passports. Wo…
Taiwan says Chinese pressure over the island is the "new normal"
Taiwan's Foreign Ministry on Tuesday said the scholars' passports and mobile phones were confiscated, and they were detained in Mombasa for more than 20 hours before being allowed to leave the country.

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