Interchange Association, Japan

Coordinates: 35°39′43.66″N 139°44′11.05″E / 35.6621278°N 139.7364028°E / 35.6621278; 139.7364028

Interchange Association, Japan
公益財団法人交流協会
公益財団法人交流協会
Kōeki Zaidan Hōjin Kōryū Kyōkai
Agency overview
Formed 1 December 1972
Jurisdiction  Taiwan
Headquarters Aoba Roppongi Building 7th Floor
Roppongi, Minato, Tokyo
Agency executive
  • Mikio Numata, Representative[1]
Child agencies
  • Taipei Office
    Tung Tai BLD., 28 Ching Cheng st., Taipei 10547
  • Kaohsiung Office
    9F/10F., No.87, Heping 1st Rd., Lingya Dist., Kaohsiung 80272
Interchange Association, Japan
Japanese
Kanji 公益財団法人交流協会
Kana こうえき ざいだん ほうじん こうりゅう きょうかい
Japanese Former Name
Kanji 財団法人交流協会
Kana ざいだん ほうじん こうりゅう きょうかい
Chinese Name
Traditional Chinese 財團法人交流協會
Simplified Chinese 财团法人交流协会

The Interchange Association, Japan (財団法人交流協会 Zaidan Hōjin Kōryū Kyōkai) (Chinese: 財團法人交流協會; pinyin: Cáituán Fǎrén Jiāoliú Xiéhuì; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Châi-thoân Hoat-jîn Kau-liû Hia̍p-hōe) represents the interests of Japan in Taiwan.

Its counterpart in Japan is the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in Japan, formerly the office of the Association of East Asian Relations

It has offices in Tokyo, in Taipei and in Kaohsiung.

The Taipei office, located at 28 Ching Cheng Street, functions as the de facto embassy in Taiwan, while the Kaohsiung office similarly functions as a de facto consulate-general.[2]

The headquarters in Tokyo works to connect the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Taipei office.

History

The establishment of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China in 1972 required termination of diplomatic relations with the Republic of China, and abrogation of the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty.[3]

The Association was established in the same year, and approved by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of International Trade and Industry of Japan. It operated from the premises of the former Japanese Embassy.[4] Its staff enjoy some diplomatic privileges as well as limited diplomatic immunity.[2] On 26 December in the same year, based on the arrangement[5] between the Association of East Asian Relations, Interchange Association opened office in Taipei City and Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. Initially, the Japanese side had been desired the name Japan-Taiwan Interchange Association (日台交流協会 Hidai Kōryū Kyōkai), the Republic of China side was not accepted and insists on Japan-China Interchange Association (日華交流協会 Nikka Kōryū Kyōkai), it was eventually become a mere "Interchange Association".[6]

The arrangements under which Japan maintained unofficial relations with Taiwan became known as the "Japanese formula".[7] This was adopted by other countries, notably the United States in 1979.[2]

See also

References

  1. Japan's new representative to Taiwan set for July arrival, The China Post, June 26, 2014
  2. 1 2 3 The International Law of Recognition and the Status of the Republic of China, Hungdah Chiu in The United States and the Republic of China: Democratic Friends, Strategic Allies, and Economic Partners, Steven W. Mosher, Transaction Publishers, 1992, page 24
  3. "Tokyo High Court, June 12, 1980". The Japanese Annual of International Law [No. 25]. 1982. Retrieved 2012-04-11. (5) . . . . it must be construed that the Treaty of Peace between Japan and the Republic of China should lose its significance of existence and come to an end through the normalization of diplomatic relation between Japan and the People's Republic of China based on the Joint Communique.
  4. Diplomatic Ambiguity Looms In Taiwan Links, New York Times News Service, The Times-News, December 21, 1978, page 12
  5. "Zaidanhōjin Kōryū Kyōkai to Atō Kankeikyōkai to no Ma no Zaigai Jimusho Sōgo Setchi ni Kansuru Torikime" 財団法人交流協会と亜東関係協会との間の在外事務所相互設置に関する取り決め [Arrangements for Overseas Offices between the Interchange Association and the Association of East Asian Relations]. 26 December 1972. Retrieved 28 October 2016.
  6. 林金莖 (1987). 戦後の日華関係と国際法 [Japan-China War: relationship and international law] (in Japanese).
  7. The Japanese Formula, New York Times News Service, The Times-News, April 11, 1977, page 9
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.