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BEIJING, May 3 (Xinhuanet)
-- Relevant departments of the mainland will soon allow mainland residents
to tour in Taiwan, according to an announcement made here Tuesday morning
by Chen Yunlin, director of the Taiwan Work Office of CPC Central
Committee and the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.
Removal of the ban for
mainland residents to travel to Taiwan is expected to expand
people-to-people contacts between the two sides of the Taiwan Straits,
help boost Taiwan's tourism, food and beverage and other related
industries and will bring concrete benefits to the general public in
Taiwan.
Concerted efforts from both
sides of the Taiwan Straits have promoted exchanges of visits between
residents on the Chinese mainland and Taiwan in recent years.
Statistics provided by the
Chinese mainland side say that Taiwan compatriots made 3.686 million trips
to the mainland in 2004, up 34.9 percent over the previous year. In the
meantime, residents on the Chinese mainland made 145,000 trips to Taiwan,
up14.2 percent year-on-year.
Personnel exchanges between
the Chinese mainland and Taiwan started with homecoming trips of Taiwan
compatriots.
In 1979, the Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress issued a letter to Taiwan
compatriots and formulated a range of policies towards Taiwan to boost
cross-Straits relations,promote trade and economic cooperation, encourage
visits and enhance mutual trust between the two sides under the basic
principle of peaceful reunification and "one country, two systems".
The call from the Chinese
mainland for enhancing cross-Straits exchanges was acclaimed by the broad
masses of Taiwan compatriots,some of whom managed to visit the mainland by
way of a third city.
To date, Taiwan residents
have made 33 million trips to the Chinese mainland since the Taiwan
authorities gave them the green light in 1987.
The homecoming trips were
followed by sightseeing tours, cultural exchanges and direct investment to
the mainland. Year 1990 saw 947,600 visits exchanged between the mainland
and Taiwan,and the figure topped 1 million in 1992.
It is in line with the
common interests of Chinese compatriots on both sides of the Taiwan
Straits to promote cross-Straits economic, cultural and personnel
exchanges, said Chinese President Hu Jintao in his four-point guideline on
cross-Straits relations, proposed in early March.
Hu said continued
efforts will be made to encourage and facilitate economic cooperation, the
three "direct links", as wellas exchanges in various fields including
education, science and technology and culture.
The Chinese mainland has in
recent years drafted policies and rules to protect the legitimate rights
of the Taiwan compatriots, simplified procedures and is currently working
to develop into a regular practice the direct cross-Straits charter
flights which are now conducted on festivals and holidays.
Yet analysts say
restrictions still exist in cross-Straits personnel exchanges, mainly
because the Taiwan authorities have refused to open the island province to
mainland tourists and the Taiwan leader's attempt to seek "Taiwan
independence" has also seriously hindered exchanges between the two
sides. |