The Taiwanese Foreign Ministry on Sunday said the South African government has given Taiwan a March deadline to relocate the island’s de facto embassy outside of the capital city, Pretoria.
The Taiwanese foreign ministry, however, blamed the Chinese government for the pressure from the South African government.
South Africa severed official diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 1997 and only maintains formal – and very close relations with China, which views the democratically governed island as Chinese territory with no right to the trappings of a state.
In a statement late on Sunday, Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said South Africa’s government had sent a letter in late January demanding the de facto Taiwanese embassy leave Pretoria before the end of March and “even be renamed as a trade office”.
The demand “shows China’s suppression against us in South Africa is becoming more serious”, it added, saying, however, that negotiations between Taiwan and South Africa were ongoing.
South Africa had previously made a request last year for what is called the Taipei Liaison Office to leave Pretoria.
China is South Africa’s largest trading partner globally and one with which it is looking to expand cooperation in areas such as renewable energy.
Taiwan’s government rejects China’s sovereignty claims and says it has a right to forge ties with other countries.
Taiwan only has formal diplomatic ties with 12 countries, and in Africa it only has a single ally left, Eswatini, which is almost entirely surrounded by South Africa.