Oslo: Norway and China announced yesterday the resumption of diplomatic relations, six years after Beijing froze ties with Oslo over the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to a Chinese dissident.
The Nobel Peace Prize in October 2010 to human rights activist Liu Xiaobo -- imprisoned in his own country by authorities who consider him a "criminal" -- had angered the Chinese regime so much that it suspended its ties with Norway.
During a surprise visit to Beijing by Norwegian Foreign Minister Borge Brende yesterday, the two nations issued a joint declaration announcing the thaw in their ties.
"The Norwegian government reiterates its commitment to the one-China policy, fully respects China's sovereignty and territorial integrity, attaches high importance to China's core interests and major concerns, will not support actions that undermine them, and will do its best to avoid any future damage to the bilateral relations," the statement said.
Human rights issues were not mentioned in the two-page document.
"We haven't made any concessions but we have engaged in confidence-building work over a long period of time," Prime Minister Erna Solberg said recently.
According to Norwegian media, China had demanded an official apology in order to restore ties, but Norway's government repeatedly refused, insisting that the Nobel Committee was an independent body free to make its own choices.
"The situation since year 2010 has been difficult," Brende said in a press statement issued in Oslo.
"The normalisation of our relationship is the result of long and painstaking diplomatic efforts at many levels to restore trust between our two countries," he said.