United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758
The United Nations General
Assembly Resolution 2758 was passed in response to the United Nations General
Assembly Resolution 1668 that required any change in China's representation in
the UN be determined by a two-thirds vote referring to Article 18 of the UN
Charter. The resolution, passed on 25 October 1971, recognized the People's
Republic of China (PRC) as "the only legitimate representative of China to
the United Nations" and removed the collective representatives of Chiang
Kai-shek of the Republic of China (ROC) from the United Nations.
Background China was one
of the original 51 member states of United Nations, which was created in 1945.
At that time, Republic of China (ROC), led by the Chinese Nationalist Party,
was the government of China. Also in 1945, civil war broke out between the ROC
army and troops led by the Communist Party of China (CPC). In 1949, the CPC
established the People's Republic of China (PRC) in Beijing, and the ROC
government was forced to retreat to Taiwan, which Japan had renounced all right,
title and claim to in the Treaty of San Francisco. After 1950, the PRC was in
control of mainland China, while the ROC maintained control over Taiwan,
Pescadores, and some small islands.
The People's Republic of China
claimed to be the successor state of the Republic of China, while the
Nationalists in Taiwan championed the continued existence of the Republic of
China. Both claimed to be the only legitimate Chinese government, and each
refused to maintain diplomatic relations with countries that have recognized
the other. The ROC continued to represent China in the UN until Resolution 2758
was passed.
Article 3 of the UN Charter
provides: The original Members of the United Nations shall be the states
which, having participated in the United Nations Conference on International
Organization at San Francisco, or having previously signed the Declaration by
United Nations of 1 January 1942, sign the present Charter and ratify it in
accordance with Article 110. Additionally, the Republic of China had signed
and ratified the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations on 18 April 1961 and
19 December 1969 respectively. However, by the late 1960s concerns regarding
human rights surged, turning the tables of the situation.
Proceedings at the United
Nations On 15 July 1971, 17 UN members, led by Albania, requested that a
question of the "Restoration of the lawful rights of the People's Republic
of China in the United Nations" be placed on the provisional agenda of the
twenty-sixth session of the UN General Assembly. In an explanatory memorandum
accompanying their request, the 17 UN members observed that for years they had
protested against what they considered were hostile and discriminatory policy
followed by several governments with regard to the communist government of
mainland China, which they considered to be the genuine representative of the
Chinese people.[4] The existence of the People's Republic of China, they
declared, was a reality which could “not be changed to suit the myth of a so
called Republic of China, fabricated out of a portion of Chinese territory”. In
the view of the 17 UN members, the ROC were unlawful authorities installed in
the island of Taiwan which claimed to represent China, and they remained there
only because of the permanent presence of United States Armed Forces.[4] No
important international problems, they added, could be solved without the
participation of the People's Republic of China. It was in the fundamental
interests, they concluded, of the United Nations to "restore"
promptly to the People's Republic of China its seat in the organization, thus
putting an end to a "grave injustice" and "dangerous
situation" which had been perpetuated in order to fulfill a policy that
had been increasingly repudiated.[4] This meant the immediate expulsion of the
representatives of the Chiang Kai-shek regime from the seat which it held in
the United Nations.
On 17 August 1971, the United
States requested that a second item, "The representation of China in the
United Nations" be placed on the provisional agenda, too. In the
explanatory memorandum accompanying the U.S. request, the U.S. said that in
dealing with the problem of the representation of China, the United Nations
should take cognizance of the existence of both the People's Republic of China
and the Republic of China; it should reflect that incontestable reality in the
manner in which it made provision for China's representation. The United
Nations, the U.S. submitted, should not be required to take a position on the
respective conflicting claims of the People's Republic of China or the Republic
of China pending a peaceful resolution of the matter as called for by the
United Nations Charter. Thus, the U.S. added, the People's Republic of China
should be represented and at the same time provision should be made to ensure
that the Republic of China was not deprived of its representation.
On 22 September 1971 the United
States proposed at the UN General Committee that the two items be combined into
one item called "The Question of China". The proposal was, however,
rejected by 12 votes to 9 with 3 abstentions. On 25 September 1971, the first Albanian-backed
draft resolution, A/L.630 and Add.l and 2, was submitted by 23 states including
17 of the states which had joined in placing the question on the agenda, to
"restore to the People's Republic of China all its rights and expel
forthwith the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek." On 29 September 1971, a
second draft resolution, A/L.632 and Add.l and 2, sponsored by 22 members
including the U.S., was proposed declaring that any proposal to deprive the
Republic of China of representation was an important question under Article 18
of the UN Charter, and thus would require a two-thirds supermajority for
approval. On 29 September 1971, a third draft resolution, A/L.632 and Add.l and
2, sponsored by 19 members including the U.S., was proposed by which the
Assembly would affirm the right of representation of the People's Republic of
China and recommend that it be seated as one of the five permanent members of
the Security Council but also affirm the continuing right of representation of
the Republic of China.
On 15 October 1971 the
representatives of 22 UN members requested the UN Secretary-General to
distribute, as an official Assembly document a statement of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China dated 20 August 1971. In this
statement, made in response to the U.S. letter of 17 August 1971 and its
accompanying explanatory memorandum, the People's Republic of China declared
that the U.S. proposal was a blatant exposure of the Nixon government's scheme
of creating "two Chinas" in the United Nations. It added, there was
only one China, the People's Republic of China. Taiwan, it added, was an
inalienable part of Chinese territory and a province of China which had already
been returned to the motherland after the Second World War. It went on to state
that the U.S. was plotting to separate Taiwan from China and was wildly
attempting to force members of the UN to submit to its will. The Chinese
government declared that the Chinese people and government firmly opposed
"two Chinas", "one China, one Taiwan" or any similar
arrangements, as well as the claim that "the status of Taiwan remains to
be determined".They declared they would have absolutely nothing to do with
the UN in such scenarios.
Discussion at the Assembly took
place at 12 plenary meetings between 18 and 26 October 1971 with 73 member
states taking part. During the debates four more draft resolutions were
submitted - three by Tunisia and one by Saudi Arabia. Broadly, each of these
draft resolutions was a variation on the third draft resolution described
above, backed by the U.S. Notably, the Saudi-proposed resolution would have
held that the people of the island of Taiwan had a right to self-determination.
Similarly, the Tunisian resolution would have called for the Republic of China
government to be represented in the United Nations under the name
"Formosa". Algeria's representative in the debates submitted that to
recognize that the government of the People's Republic of China was lawfully
entitled to represent China did not imply the eviction of a member but the
eviction of the representatives of a dissident minority regime. The U.S., in
its submission, took the opposite view; arguing that adoption of the resolution
expelling the representatives sent from Taipei would imply the termination of
the membership of a longstanding member. The spokesman of the Republic of China
submitted that his country had earned its place in the United Nations by virtue
of its contribution to peace and freedom during the Second World War. He said
the Chinese communist regime, which had never had the moral consent of the
Chinese people, could in no way be regarded as the representative of the great
Chinese nation. Various members including two permanent members of the security
council, the United Kingdom and the USSR, argued that requiring the matter to
be subject to a supermajority vote was not appropriate because the adoption of
the Albanian proposed resolution did not involve the admission or expulsion of
a member. Rather it concerned only credentials and Taiwan had never been a
member.They argued there was only one Chinese state that was a member. Any
other Chinese state would have to apply for membership in accordance with the
Charter.
On 25 October 1971 the voting
took place. In the first vote held, the Assembly rejected the U.S. backed
proposal that the matter would require a supermajority vote — the 'important
question motion'. The Assembly then voted on a separate U.S. proposal that the
words "and to expel forthwith the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek from
the place which they unlawfully occupied at the United Nations and in all the
organizations related to it" be removed from the draft resolution. This motion
would have allowed the PRC to join the UN as "China's
representative", while allowing the ROC to remain a regular UN member (if
there had been enough votes for it). The motion was rejected by a vote of 61 to
51, with 16 abstentions.
At this point the representative
of the Republic of China, Ambassador Liu Chieh, stated "in view of the
frenzy and irrational manner that has been exhibited in this hall, the
delegation of the Republic of China has now decided not to take part in any further
proceedings of this General Assembly." He said the "ideals upon which
the UN was founded" had been "betrayed". The Assembly then
adopted draft Albanian proposed resolution A/L. 630 and Add.l and 2, by a
roll-call vote of 76 to 35, with 17 abstentions, as Resolution 2758. The
Beijing government began representing China at the UN from 15 November 1971 and
its delegates were seated at the UN Security Council meeting held on 23
November 1971, the first such meeting where representatives of the Beijing
government represented China.
Later developments On 23
July 2007, Secretary-General of the UN Ban Ki-moon rejected Taiwan's membership
bid to "join the UN under the name of Taiwan", citing Resolution 2758
as acknowledging that Taiwan is part of China, although it is important to
note, not the People’s Republic of China. Since Resolution 2758 was said to be
"deliberately ambiguous" and did not use the word 'Taiwan', Ban
Ki-moon's interpretation to this effect came under fire from the American media
and was also opposed by several UN members led by the U.S. A report by the
American think tank the Heritage Foundation, also suggests that the US
government issued a nine-point démarche specifically rejecting the
Secretary-General's statement. The US did not make any public pronouncement on
the matter. Nevertheless, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's statement reflected
long-standing UN policy and is mirrored in other documents promulgated by the
United Nations. For example, the UN's "Final Clauses of Multilateral
Treaties, Handbook", 2003 (a publication which predated his tenure in
Office) states: ...regarding the Taiwan Province of China, the
Secretary-General follows the General Assembly’s guidance incorporated in
resolution 2758 (XXVI) of the General Assembly of 25 October 1971 on the
restoration of the lawful rights of the People’s Republic of China in the
United Nations. The General Assembly decided to recognize the representatives
of the Government of the People’s Republic of China as the only legitimate
representatives of China to the United Nations. Hence, instruments received
from the Taiwan Province of China will not be accepted by the Secretary-General
in his capacity as depositary.
Controversy According to
some viewpoints, Resolution 2758 solved the issue of "China's
representation" in the United Nations—but it left the issue of Taiwan's
representation unresolved in a practical sense. The ROC government continues to
hold de facto control over Taiwan and other islands. While the PRC claims
sovereignty over all of "China" and claims that Taiwan is part of
China, it does not exercise actual authority over Taiwan, though it continues
to claim that it holds such sovereignty. Former president Ma Ying-jeou said
during his term, "The Republic of China is a sovereign country, and
mainland China is part of our territory according to the Constitution.
Therefore, our relations with the mainland are not international relations. It
is a special relationship".
On the other hand, although
policy has changed, and the ROC Government now focuses on representing the
interests of the island of Taiwan formally via its constitution, the ROC still
claims to be the state of China, and thus its juridical claim to the right to
govern the whole of China still holds. Most importantly, although Taiwan has
been governed by the ROC as a de facto separate country, some argue that de
jure Taiwan was not transferred to China in the post-WWII San Francisco Peace
Treaty, which left its disposition open. The pursuit of independence from
"China" (the ROC) is a controversial issue in Taiwanese politics. The
ROC framed the issue as one involving "the expulsion of a member".
The United Kingdom and the USSR took a different view, arguing that only one
Chinese state was a member and so the question was merely one of which Chinese
delegation's credentials to accept and that any other Chinese state would have
to apply for membership in accordance with the Charter. The Resolution has been
criticized as illegal by the Republic of China government, since expulsion of a
member requires the recommendation of the Security Council and can only occur
if a nation "has persistently violated the Principles contained in the
present Charter," according to Article 6. Attempts were made to get a
review of Resolution 2758 onto the agenda with a proposal in 1998 noting that
"as to its return to the United Nations, the Government has made it clear
that it no longer claims to represent all of China, but that it seeks
representation only for its 21.8 million people". Actions by the ROC
government under its "Taiwan-independence" leaning president, Chen
Shui-ban, to apply for membership under the name "Taiwan" highlighted
this intention. However, the ROC administration under Ma Ying-jeou dropped
attempts to become a UN member state.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_General_Assembly_Resolution_2758
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