BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhuanet) -- Kuomintang (KMT) Party of China
Chairman Lien Chan said here Friday that the Chinese people on both sides of the
Taiwan Straits should "actively" maintain the status quo and create a win-win
future.
In his speech delivered Friday
morning at the prestigious Beijing University, Lien, who is leading a KMT
delegation to continue an eight-day mainland trip, said, "maintaining the status
quo may be the best way to develop cross-Straits relations, but it should not be
done in a passive manner."
The KMT chairman quoted a famous
Western saying "peace by pieces," saying that every Chinese should contribute
his "piece" of efforts to the promotion of peace across the Taiwan Straits, and
every Chinese should be held accountable for the well-being of the rest of the
Chinese on the globe.
He said it is the common
aspiration of all Chinese across the Straits to seek reconciliation and dialogue
for building a win-win future.
"We should put the people first
and give priority to the people's well-being," Lien said. "This is supported by
all the Chinese people, including the 23 million residents in Taiwan and the 1.3
billion people on the mainland."
"We're paving the way and building
a bridge, and the people will be glad to see cross-Straits dialogue,
reconciliation and cooperation, rather than confrontation or conflict," Lien
said.
Lien said 66 percent of the
surveyed Taiwan people in a recent poll support cross-Straits reconciliation and
dialogue, while about 30 percent say it is unlikely to produce any concrete
result.
The 68-year-old politician urged
some people in Taiwan to give up the Cold War mentality.
"Some people in Taiwan viewed my
visit being aimed at the so-called third cooperation between the KMT and the
Communist Party of China to contain Taiwan, or rather contain 'Taiwan
independence'," Lien said.
"That's a very grave distortion,"
Lien said, adding that those people's mentality still reflects features in the
20th century.
"Why couldn't we pay more
attention to the present and create a better future?" Lien said.
"Why couldn't we proceed from
goodwill, trust each other, care people's welfare and long-term interest?" he
said.
Lien also snubbed the policy of
"desinification", which is aimed at severing ties between the Chinese mainland
and Taiwan.
It's "a pity" that some political
forces in Taiwan have been advocating such "an extreme idea", said Lien when
answering a question at the end of his 40-minute speech.
"I'm sure that the majority of
Taiwan people will not take on their shoes," said Lien, who described the
efforts for "desinification" as something out of the imagination of the people
in other countries and the mainland.
These "desinification" efforts
have aroused great concern among Taiwan people and even foreigners residing in
Taiwan, he added.
He said parents of numerous school
children are now looking for resources other than public schools in Taiwan to
continue education in Chinese history and culture.
"The parents hope their children
could learn more about the creams of the Chinese culture," Lien said.
"You can not push history," Lien
said, "Success can only be made when you take concrete steps."
Lien said he felt it a great honor
to have stepped on "the historical bus" to embark on his "journey of peace" to
the mainland at a critical turning point in history.
He said that sticking to peace and
achieving a win-win future are a historical trend and the shared outcry of the
people across the Taiwan Straits.
"The historical trend and common
aspiration of the people encouraged us to shoulder the historical responsibility
in achieving those goals," Lien said.
The win-win situation resulting
from closer economic ties across the Taiwan Straits will benefit not only the
two sides but also neighboring countries in the Asia-Pacific region, Lien said.
"One plus one makes more than
two," Lien said, adding that the two sides across the Straits are now more and
more interdependent.
While the mainland is striving for
rapid economic growth, Taiwan tries on the way for its second round of economic
miracle, Lien said.
"The common prosperity for the
Chinese across the Straits is no longer a unattainable dream," he said.
Cross-Straits agricultural
cooperation is one vehicle for common prosperity.
Lien said Taiwan has made great
progress in agricultural technological development over the past decades but its
farmers are suffering from the consequences of abundant farm produce versus a
relatively small market and poor distribution networks that often fail to sell
out the products in time.
"Despite the fact that agriculture
is contributing less than three percent to our gross domestic product, we still
have several million people involved in agricultural production or other related
fields."
Lien said he hoped to see more
Taiwan products sold to the mainland and further cooperation between the two
sides in agriculture and stock-breeding sectors.
"The
mainland is a huge market and has a sound environment for agricultural
development. I'm sure many things that we cannot do in Taiwan can be done here,"
he said.