1 Step 1
keyboard_arrow_leftPrevious
Nextkeyboard_arrow_right
[CP_POLLS id="3"]

Which global issue should be the top priority for world leaders?

1 Step 1
keyboard_arrow_leftPrevious
Nextkeyboard_arrow_right

Canal sovereignty is ‘non-negotiable’, asserts Panama after Trump’s remarks on taking control

Canal sovereignty

After US President-elect Donald Trump repeated inaccurate claims that China controls the Panama Canal, Panama has again reaffirmed its sovereignty over the key Atlantic-Pacific waterway.

 

Panama reiterated on Tuesday that the sovereignty of its eponymous ship canal was not up for discussion after US President-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out military action to regain control.

“The sovereignty of our canal is not negotiable and is part of our history of struggle,” Foreign Minister Javier Martinez-Acha said, adding that President Jose Raul Mulino had made his stance clear.

 

Trump made the remarks during a rambling news conference at his home in southern Florida. The conference was supposed to discuss Emirati investment in US technology.

However, the president-elect went off-track, repeating unsubstantiated claims that China was now operating the Panama Canal, which the United States built in the early 20th century and handed over to Panama in part in 1977 and full in 1999.

“Look, the Panama Canal is vital to our country,” Trump said. “China is operating it—China!—and we gave the Panama Canal to Panama; we didn’t give it to China. They’ve abused that gift.”

Martinez-Acha dismissed the claim, saying: “The only hands operating the canal are Panamanian, and that is how it is going to stay.”

Does China control the Panama Canal?

Trump had made similar erroneous comments in December when he wished a Merry Christmas to the “wonderful soldiers of China, who are lovingly, but illegally, operating the Panama Canal.”

Panama’s president described the claim as “nonsense,” saying there was “absolutely no Chinese interference.”

China is the second-largest user of the Panama Canal after the US and is also a major investor in the Central American country, as it is in many parts of the world.

Two ports at the canal’s entrances are managed by a subsidiary of Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison Holdings, and Beijing has helped finance a new bridge over the waterway. However, China does not own or control the canal, and there is no evidence of Chinese military involvement.

Panama’s President Jose Raul Mulino has also rebuked Trump’s suggestions regarding the Panama Canal. (Image: Martin Bernetti /AFP/Getty Images via Deutsche Welle)

 

Is Panama ‘ripping off’ the United States?

Trump has also claimed that Panama is “ripping off” the United States with high shipping rates, prompting protests outside the US embassy.

According to the shipping publication Lloyd’s List, canal transit costs have indeed increased over the past year due to a historic drought, but not only for the US.

Construction of the Panama Canal was initially begun by France in the 1880s but was halted after the number of deaths among workers in the harsh conditions became untenable and the company managing the operation went bust. The United States acquired the project in 1904 and work was completed two years ahead of schedule in 1914.

The canal was officially handed over to Panama in 1977 by former US President Jimmy Carter, who passed away on December 29 and whose body was on Tuesday returned to Washington for a series of official funeral rites.

But that didn’t stop Trump from telling reporters, “I liked him as a man. I disagreed with his policies. He thought giving away the Panama Canal was a good thing.”

Additional belligerent and outlandish territorial claims against Canada, Greenland and Mexico have accompanied Trump’s recent Panama Canal threats.

 

Source Link:-

Subscribe to our mailing list to get the new updates!

Featured Posts