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BEIJING, April 26
(Xinhuanet) -- "Welcome home, Mr. Lien!" is the message that has come up
repeatedly over the past three days on the website of the People's Daily,
a leading Chinese newspaper.
Internet browsers on the
Chinese mainland have left more than 3,000 messages on the site's bulletin
board system (BBS), opened on April 22 to solicit messages to Lien Chan,
chairman of Taiwan's Kuomintang, or the Nationalist Party, who is arriving
Tuesday for a visit to the mainland.
The messages are passionate
and friendly and voice hope that the epoch-making trip will bring about
more concrete exchanges across the Taiwan Strait.
"My eyes moistened when I
heard about Mr. Lien's visit. It's exciting -- like a close relative whom
we haven't met for decades is coming at long last," said a man from
Dalian, a port city in northeast China's Liaoning Province, who gave his
name as Yue Zongguan. "I hope Mr. Lien will enjoy the tour."
"When will Taiwan, the
eldest brother, be reunited with the Chinese mainland?" said an anonymous
poster who referred to Hong Kong and Macao as the second and third
brothers.
"A step taken today will
form the basis for a great stride tomorrow," said a poster nicknamed
Lightning at Wind's Heel. "Blood is thicker than water. The Chinese people
have to be united amongst ourselves in order to rejuvenate the nation."
The majority of the Chinese
posters say they are most attentive to Lien's upcoming meeting with
President Hu Jintao -- the first between leaders of the Communist Party of
China and the Kuomintang in six decades -- and whether the visit will
promote concrete exchanges across the Strait, accounting for 79 percent
and 61 percent respectively of the respondents to an on-line poll
conducted by Xinhuanet.com.
The official website of
Xinhua News Agency started the poll Tuesday morning, asking "which part of
Lien's visit do you find most intriguing".
About 40 percent of those
responded say they are particularly interested in what Lien is going to
say in a speech he'll be giving at Beijing University on Friday. The
university is the almamater of Lien's mother, according to a report by
Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po.
A survey released Monday by
the Social Survey Institute of China said 96 percent of the mainland
respondents "welcome and appreciate" Lien's visit.
The former governmental
institution had interviewed 1,000 Chinese mainland residents in Beijing,
Shanghai, Guangzhou, Nanjing, Xi'an and other major cities by telephone
seeking public opinions about Lien's tour and the upcoming visit of James
C.Y. Soong, chairman of the People First Party.
Lien is leading a KMT
delegation to visit Nanjing, Beijing, Xi'an and Shanghai from April 26 to
May 3 at the invitation of Hu Jintao, general secretary of the CPC Central
Committee.
The news of Lien's visit has
spread throughout the four cities, which are working all out to offer the
best services to the guests from across the Strait.
Nanjing, the capital of the
KMT-ruled Chinese government before1949, has bedecked the Sun Yat-sen
Mausoleum with azaleas, pines and cypresses. Lien and his delegation will
visit the mausoleum ofthe KMT's founding father on Wednesday.
"Mr. Lien's visit to the
mainland is long overdue," a gardener at the mausoleum said. "The Taiwan
compatriots should come to visit the mainland more often, and I hope that
more mainland residents will have the chance to visit Taiwan, too."
Imposing Jinling Hotel,
which will accommodate Lien's delegation, studied Lien's eating habits
before preparing his menus, said a hotel manageress who gave her surname
as Xue.
"We've prepared the best
Chinese tea, traditional Beijing snacks and art performances -- including
Peking Opera -- to treat the guests," said a waiter at Laoshe Tea House
near Tian'anmen Square. The group will visit the Beijing-style teahouse
upon arrival at the national capital on Thursday.
In Xi'an, where Lien was
born in 1936, he's scheduled to visit his elementary school and pay his
respects to his grandmother's grave. "Can we pose for a picture with him?"
asked a girl at Houzaimen Primary School in Xi'an, where Lien studied as a
child.
And at his final stop in
Shanghai, China's financial hub and a magnet for Taiwanese investment,
Lien is scheduled to speak to Taiwan business people, a source with a
local federation for Taiwan-invested businesses told Xinhua.
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