Taiwan has "no basis, reason or right" to join international organizations like the United Nations which only admit sovereign countries, said Mao Ning, a spokeswoman of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Thursday.
Mao made the statement in response to the recent attempt of the United States to support the region's participation in such organizations.
"There is but one China in the world, Taiwan is an inalienable part of China’s territory, and the government of the People’s Republic of China is the sole legal government representing the whole of China. Taiwan region has no basis, reason or right to participate in the United Nations and other international organizations that only sovereign states are eligible to join. We urge the United States to abide by the one-China principle and the three Sino-U.S. joint communiques, comply with international law and basic norms in international relations, stop advancing relevant bills, halt interfering in China's internal affairs by using the Taiwan question, and cease sending wrong signals to the Taiwan secessionists," she said.
Taiwan has no right to join sovereignty-based int'l organizations: spokeswoman
Taiwan has no right to join sovereignty-based int'l organizations: spokeswoman
Taiwan has no right to join sovereignty-based int'l organizations: spokeswoman
China aims to achieve secure and reliable supply of key core artificial intelligence (AI) technologies by 2027, with its industrial scale and empowerment level remaining among the world's forefront, according to a recent government action plan.
The plan, jointly issued by eight departments including the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Cyberspace Administration of China, and the National Development and Reform Commission, outlines an ambitious push to deeply integrate AI with the manufacturing sector, foster new quality productive forces and comprehensively empower new industrialization. By 2027, the plan targets the deep application of three to five general-purpose large AI models in manufacturing, the development of specialized, full-coverage industry-specific large models, the creation of 100 high-quality industrial datasets, and the promotion of 500 typical application scenarios.
It also aims to cultivate two to three globally influential ecosystem-leading enterprises, a batch of specialized and sophisticated small and medium-sized enterprises, and a group of enabling service providers proficient in both AI technology and industry know-how.
Furthermore, China plans to build a world-leading open-source ecosystem, enhance security governance capabilities, and contribute Chinese solutions to global AI development.
The document outlines measures including promoting the coordinated development of AI chips' hardware and software, supporting innovations in model training and inference methods, fostering key industry-specific large models, and deeply embedding large model technology into core production processes.
The plan also emphasizes making breakthroughs in key technologies such as security protection for industrial model algorithms and training data protection.
China aims for secure, reliable supply of AI core tech by 2027