After Taiwan visit, China bans 4 New Zealand lawmakers as punishment
China has barred four New Zealand MPs from entering the mainland, Hong Kong and Macau after their Taiwan visit. The move has prompted Wellington to seek answers, while Taipei has condemned it as retaliation.
by Reuters · India TodayIn Short
- China bars four New Zealand MPs from entering China, Hong Kong, Macau
- New Zealand says visits align with its One China policy, expresses surprise
- Foreign Minister instructs officials to discuss concerns with Chinese authorities
New Zealand on Thursday said it would express its concerns to Beijing after China unexpectedly barred four New Zealand lawmakers from entering Hong Kong, Macau and the Chinese mainland as punishment for visiting Taiwan last month.
New Zealand lawmakers had visited the democratically governed island for decades without a problem, a spokesperson for Foreign Minister Winston Peters said.
"Such visits are not inconsistent with New Zealand's One China policy," the spokesperson said, referring to its policy since 1972 of recognising Beijing as the sole government of China.
"In the context of that long history, the minister was surprised to learn that China has taken a decision to, for the first time, impose travel bans on New Zealand MPs as a result of travel to Taiwan."
Peters instructed New Zealand foreign ministry officials in Beijing and Wellington to discuss the matter with Chinese authorities "in order to express concern at this departure from past practice and to better understand it."
Taiwan's foreign ministry said it strongly condemned China's "retaliatory" measures, adding that Beijing has no right to interfere in Taipei's interactions with "international friends."
"Parliamentary diplomacy is a normal practice among democratic nations," it said in a statement, urging China to stop pressuring and interfering with elected legislators from other countries who engage in exchanges with Taiwan.
New Zealand and China have maintained a largely stable relationship in recent years, with China remaining New Zealand's largest trading partner, even as Wellington has grown more outspoken about Beijing's expanding influence in the Pacific.
Senior politicians from both countries have exchanged a number of visits over the past three years, with New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon visiting China in 2025.
China views Taiwan as its own territory, and has not ruled out the use of force to take control of the island. Taiwan's government rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims.
"MPs are not ordinary citizens," said a spokesperson from the Chinese embassy in New Zealand in a statement on its website.
"China has consistently opposed visits to China's Taiwan region by members of the legislatures of countries that have established diplomatic relations with China, including New Zealand, and this case is no exception," the spokesperson said.
"The New Zealand side should not be surprised."
'A TYPE OF FOREIGN INTERFERENCE'
The Chinese embassy informed MPs that four lawmakers had been banned from entering China, Hong Kong and Macau for a year, according to an email from the Office of the Clerk, which administers New Zealand's parliament.
The ban targeted three lawmakers from the ruling centre-right coalition, Laura McClure, David Wilson and Maureen Pugh, along with opposition Labour lawmaker Duncan Webb.
McClure told The New Zealand Herald the travel ban was "a type of foreign interference."
"I'm not going to apologise for visiting Taiwan," she said.
The Chinese embassy told New Zealand parliament officials the travel ban could be reduced or waived if the lawmakers apologised for the trip, the email said.
A New Zealand parliament official confirmed a meeting with Chinese embassy representatives but did not disclose details.
Like most countries, New Zealand has no formal ties with Taiwan. Under New Zealand's constitution, members of parliament are independent of the government and make their own travel decisions when invited.
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