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BEIJING, April 25 -- Taiwan
leader Chen Shui-bian has given his "blessing" to this week's landmark
mainland visit by the island's major opposition leader, reversing earlier
criticism of the trip, a senior Taiwan official said.
Chen had repeatedly accused
Kuomintang (KMT) leader Lien Chan of being the mainland’s promotional
tool.
Another opposition leader
James Soong, chairman of the People First Party, has also accepted
Beijing's invitation to visit the Chinese mainland. A group of officials
from Soong's party flew to Beijing Sunday to discuss the arrangements for
the trip.
While addressing party
members in Taipei on Saturday, Chen said the law does not bar the pair
from traveling to the mainland.
"In the past, the two sides
did not have direct contacts," he was quoted as saying by “Presidential
Office” press secretary Chen Wen-tsung in interview with AFP.
"Now Lien and Soong will
have the chance of talking with Chinese leaders directly and therefore
providing us with first-hand information," Chen Shui-bian said.
"We could regard the visits
as 'stones to be thrown to explore the roads ahead' and give them our
blessing," Chen added.
Lien is due to begin his
eight-day "peace journey" Tuesday during which he will travel to Nanjing,
Beijing, his birthplace Xi’an and Shanghai. He is scheduled to meet
President Hu Jintao, also the general secretary of the Chinese Communist
Party, in Beijing on Friday.
Analysts said Chen's public
U-turn over the visits came about as a result of pressure from Washington,
which has repeatedly called on Taipei and Beijing to settle their dispute
peacefully through dialogue.
KMT spokesman Chang
Jung-kung told reporters he was informed by Washington's de facto envoy to
Taipei, Douglas Paal, that the United States supports Lien's China visit
as it could help ease Taipei-Beijing tensions.
President Chen warned the
duo not to sign any agreement with Beijing without Taipei's official
approval.
"The government's position
is crystal clear. It's fine if Lien and Soong want to travel to China
either for sight-seeing or for tomb-sweeping purposes," he was quoted as
saying by his spokesman. "But whenever they talk with the other side
involving the government's authority, then they will need the government's
authorization," he said.
(Source: China
Daily.com.cn) |