HONOLULU — Taiwan's president visited a U.S. State Department-funded think tank and educational institution Sunday on the second day of a two-day visit to Hawaii that's part of a Pacific island tour that has already triggered criticism from Beijing.
Lai Ching-te met and exchanged gifts with the president of the East-West Center, which is on the University of Hawaii's flagship Manoa campus. He spoke to an audience at the center but journalists were escorted out of a conference hall before he began speaking.
China's Foreign Ministry said it ''strongly condemned'' U.S. support for Lai's visit and had lodged a complaint with the U.S. It also denounced a newly announced U.S. weapons sale to Taiwan, a self-governing island that China claims as its own territory.
''China will closely monitor the situation's development, and take resolute and forceful measures to safeguard the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity,'' said the statement.
Hawaii was Lai's first stop on a weeklong voyage that will later take him to the Marshall Islands, Tuvalu and Palau. They account for three of the 12 countries that Taipei has formal diplomatic relations with.
Suzanne Puanani Vares-Lum, president of the East-West Center, said her institution is the perfect place for Lai to visit because it promotes relations among the United States, Asia and the Pacific.
She said it's not unusual for leaders from around the world to come to Hawaii given the state's location and what makes it special.
''There is something about Hawaii that allows us to really just see where we connect on a human to human level,'' Vares-Lum said in an interview.