TAIPEI: Taiwan said on Tuesday (Mar 24) it will skip for the first time a high-level World Trade Organization (WTO) meeting in Cameroon following a dispute with the host nation over the name used for the island in visa documents.
The Taiwanese foreign ministry said it had lodged a “stern protest” after Cameroon designated the island “Taiwan, Province of China” in paperwork issued to Taiwan’s delegation before it departed for the Mar 26 to Mar 29 event.
Cameroon then granted members of the group a “visa exemption”, but the document did not mention their nationality, misspelt some English names and identified almost all of them as female, the ministry said in a statement, noting it was clear that the central African country “had no sincere intention of resolving the issue”.
China claims Taiwan as part of its sovereign territory and opposed the designations “Taiwan” or “Republic of China”, its official name at global forums.
“Considering that our delegation members might encounter obstruction if they attempted to enter Cameroon with a document full of incorrect information, and in order to uphold our national dignity, we had no choice but to be absent,” the ministry said.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs reiterates that our country joined the WTO as a ‘separate customs territory’ not subordinate to any other member, and that our equal right to participate must not be infringed.”
It previously accused Cameroon of “subservience to China”.
The WTO declined to comment.
Taiwan joined the WTO in 2002, shortly after China, and its official name at the organisation is the “Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu (Chinese Taipei)”.
The WTO ministerial conference, its highest decision-making body, will take place in Cameroon’s capital Yaounde. It is usually held every other year.

