Taiwan severed ties with the Solomon Islands yesterday after learning the Pacific nation was switching diplomatic recognition to China. The switch is a major coup for Beijing just weeks before it celebrates the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.
 And it leaves Taiwan more isolated than ever with just 16 nations left that recognise it.
Taiwan’s foreign minister Joseph Wu said Taipei had learned that the cabinet of Solomons Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare had made the decision to recognise Beijing earlier yesterday.
 “The government hereby declares the termination of diplomatic relations with the Solomon Islands with immediate effect,” Wu said, adding Taiwanese diplomats were being withdrawn from Honiara and that Solomons envoys would be expected to do the same. 
 Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen said she felt “strong regret and condemnation” over the decision.  Sogavare, who governs through a coalition after an April election, had been under intense pressure from parliamentary colleagues who saw little benefit in staying with the shrinking band of nations that officially recognise Taipei. He had publicly said China was seen as more likely to provide significant infrastructure funding to the impoverished nation, where less than 50% of the population have access to electricity.
 He also said switching to China would give the Solomons greater leverage over traditional regional powers, citing Fiji, which shrugged off sanctions imposed by Australia and New Zealand following a 2006 military coup by boosting relations with China. 
Taiwan has been a de facto sovereign nation since the end of a civil war in 1949, but China still views the island as its territory. 
Over the decades, as China’s economic and military power has grown, most countries, including the United States and most Western nations, switched recognition to Beijing.
 In the last decade only a handful of nations remained loyal to Taiwan, largely in Latin America and the Pacific.  But Beijing stepped up its campaign to diplomatically isolate Taiwan after Tsai’s 2016 landslide election because she hails from a party that refuses to recognise the idea that the island is part of “one China”.  It has also ramped up military drills.
 The small African nation of Sao Tome and Principe was the first to fall, switching recognition to Beijing in late 2016, followed by Burkina Faso and then three Latin American nations: Panama, El Salvador and the Dominican Republic.  
Tsai is seeking re-election in January polls which will be dominated by relations with China. She has described the election as a “fight for freedom and democracy”, setting herself up as someone who can defend Taiwan from an increasingly assertive Beijing.
 Responding to the break with the Solomons, Tsai accused China of “sapping Taiwan’s morale and the people’s will by cutting our diplomatic countries and other suppression”. 
Her main challenger Han Kuo-yu, from the opposition Kuomintang party, favours rebooting the relationship with Beijing. 
In Honiara, which was rocked by rioting when Sogavare was elected in April, police were on alert in case the decision sparked violence in the capital.
Assistant Commissioner Simpson Pogeava outlined strict controls on public protests, saying such events in the past had been hijacked by “opportunists”. 
“I want to assure the good citizens of Solomon Islands especially in Honiara that the situation in the capital city is ‘business as usual’ but police will continue to monitor the situation through visibility patrols in the light of the decision,” he said in a statement.   
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