BEIJING, April 27 -- Taiwan's Kuomintang (KMT) party Chairman Lien Chan
arrived in Nanjing yesterday on the first leg of his landmark visit to the
mainland. During the eight-day trip, Lien and his delegation of more than 60
members will also visit Beijing, Xi'an and Shanghai.
The KMT leader's trip comes just weeks after the party sent its first
official delegation, headed by Vice-Chairman Chiang Pin-kung, to the mainland.
Compared with Chiang's "ice-breaking" trip, Lien's visit will be of greater
significance to history. Lien is the first KMT chairman to visit the mainland
since 1949. This is also Lien's first trip back to the mainland since he left
his birthplace, Xi'an in Shaanxi Province, in 1946 when he was 10 years old.
When Lien holds talks with Hu Jintao, general secretary of the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC), in Beijing on Friday, it will
be the first face-to-face meeting between top KMT and CPC leaders in 60 years.
Against such a historical background, the visit has special meaning not
only for Lien himself and his party, but also for future exchanges between the
KMT and the CPC, and cross-Straits relations.
For the 69-year-old KMT leader, his return to the mainland after 59 years
is certainly a trip that will contain sentiment and delight. As Lien said before
leaving for the mainland, he is to make the mainland visit with a warm feeling
in his heart.
On the one hand, Lien will relive his childhood memories by visiting his
elementary school. On the other hand, he also has the opportunity to gain
first-hand knowledge about the fast-developing mainland and its people.
Also, in his capacity as KMT chairman, Lien and other delegation members
will recall the past through their visit to the mausoleum of Sun Yat-sen, the
KMT founder, in Nanjing.
The scheduled meeting between Lien and Hu marks a breakthrough in the
history of CPC-KMT relations and is a symbol of reconciliation.
It shows that the two parties are willing to cast aside the enmity that has
dominated their relations since the civil war in the 1940s. For the sake of the
welfare and interests of people across the Straits, they are ready to join their
efforts to improve cross-Straits relations and promote common development on
both sides of the Straits.
Lien defined his mainland trip as a "journey of peace" and said there will
be no limits on what subjects he will discuss with Hu. It is hoped that the
candid exchange of views between the two top party leaders will help enhance
mutual understanding and trust. In line with the spirit of seeking common ground
and shelving differences, the two parties are sure to find shared interests in
promoting cross-Straits peace.
Given the current political stalemate in cross-Straits relations, such
inter-party consultation between the CPC and the KMT is expected to open a new
path for cross-Straits interaction, and lay the groundwork for closer bilateral
ties. It conforms to the common aspiration of people across the Straits for
peace, stability and development.
The achievements of Lien's visit are set to help push forward cross-Straits
relations, including economic and trade exchanges and, hopefully, facilitate the
establishment of a peace and development framework across the Straits.
At a critical juncture in cross-Straits ties, both sides of the Straits
should come up with the political wisdom to strive for a win-win situation. In
this sense, Lien's visit will play an exemplary role for other Taiwanese
parties.
(Source: China Daily)