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BEIJING, April 26
(Xinhuanet) -- Lien Chan, chairman of the Kuomintang (KMT) party, is in
the center of media attention these days. A KMT delegation headed by Lien
Tuesday kicked off an eight-day "journey of peace" to the mainland at the
invitation of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and
General Secretary Hu Jintao.
Lien was born in Xi'an,
capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, in August 1936. He was
brought up in a rich family in Tainan, Taiwan. His ancestral home is
Zhangzhou in Fujian Province,east China.
His name was given by his
grandfather, a noted reformer, when China was under the threat of Japanese
invasion. It means "fighting ceaselessly."
Lien's father held important
posts in the KMT government, including "head of the construction
department of Taiwan Province"and "interior minister" of the Taiwan
authorities.
In 1946, in the fourth year
of his primary school education, Lien left the mainland for Taiwan with
his mother.
He enrolled in the political
science department of the National Taiwan University in 1953 and then
University of Chicago of the United States in 1959. He obtained a
doctorate in political science from the University of Chicago in 1965.
He taught in US universities
in 1966 and 1967 and returned to National Taiwan University in 1968 to
serve as chairman of the Department of Political Science and of Graduate
Institute of Political Science.
Lien was appointed
"ambassador" to El Salvador in June 1975. His subsequent posts included
director of Department of Youth Affairs of the KMT Central Committee,
"chairman of National Youth Commission of Executive Yuan," "minister of
Transportation and Communications," "vice premier of Executive Yuan,"
"minister of Foreign Affairs" and "governor" of Taiwan Province.
He was elected vice-chairman
of the KMT in 1993 and assumed thepost "premier of Executive Yuan" in the
same year. He was elected "vice-president" of Taiwan in 1996 and for a
period served concurrently as "premier of Executive Yuan."
He lost Taiwan's
"presidential election" in March 2000 as the KMT candidate.
He was elected KMT chairman
after former chairman Lee Teng-hui was forced to resign for his negative
role in the presidential election in 2000 and reelected KMT chairman in
2001, in both elections supported by more than 90 percent of the voters.
As KMT chairman, Lien
reformed the party's operational mechanism and actively pushed forward
cooperation with the People First Party (PFP) and the New Party to form
the Pan-Blue Alliance.
In March 2004, Lien
partnered with PFP Chairman James Soong to run for president, losing by a
small margin. In December's "legislative election" of the same year, the
Pan-Blue Alliance won the majority.
Lien identifies himself with
the 1992 Consensus reached in cross-Straits negotiations that adheres to
the one-China principle.He opposes "Taiwanese independence," advocates
developing cross-Straits relations and has worked for peace across the
Taiwan Straits.
During his tenure, the KMT
successfully pushed forward the cross-Straits Spring Festival chartered
flights for Taiwan businessmen on the mainland and sent a KMT delegation
to visit the mainland around the end of March. After the successful visit,
Liendecided to accept the invitation of the CPC Central Committee and Hu
to visit the mainland as KMT chairman.
Lien's wife Lien Fang-yu was
born in a university professor's family in Taiwan. The Liens have two sons
and two daughters. |