Taiwan President to Visit Eswatini, Last Diplomatic Ally in Africa

TAIPEI, April 13 (Reuters) – Taiwan President ⁠Lai ⁠Ching-te will visit Eswatini ⁠next week, his office said on Monday, ​the island’s last remaining diplomatic ally in Africa.

Taiwan, which ‌China claims as its own ‌territory with no right to state-to-state relations, ⁠now has ⁠formal ties with only 12 countries, almost all small, ​less-developed nations in Latin America, the Caribbean and the Pacific, like Belize and Tuvalu.

Lai will be in Eswatini from ​April 22-26, his spokesperson Karen Kuo told reporters, for ⁠the ⁠40th anniversary of King ⁠Mswati ​III’s accession and his 58th birthday.

Lai is flying directly to ​Eswatini, which is ⁠almost entirely surrounded by South Africa, and does not require a layover, unlike visits to Latin America, which require transits via the United States that routinely ⁠anger China.

This will be Lai’s first trip outside of Taiwan ⁠since November 2024, when he visited the Marshall Islands, Tuvalu, and Palau, and transited through Hawaii and the U.S. territory of Guam.

The last time a Taiwanese president visited Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland and home to around 1.3 million people, was in 2023, when Tsai Ing-wen made the ⁠journey.

Taiwan has provided large amounts of aid to the small southern African nation, an absolute monarchy. In 2021, it sent antiviral medication to help King ​Mswati III recover from COVID.

(Reporting by Ben ​Blanchard; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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