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BEIJING, April 29
(Xinhuanet) -- Top leaders of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the
Chinese Kuomintang (KMT) party shook hands for the first time in 60 years
at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Friday.
The landmark event indicates
that the two parties share common concerns about the future of the Chinese
nation, and are actively seeking new paradigms for breaking the current
stalemate in cross-Straits relations.
During his historic meeting
with visiting KMT Chairman Lien Chan, CPC Central Committee General
Secretary Hu Jintao has said that despite discrepancies, both parties can
seek common ground by" prioritizing the fundamental interests of the
Chinese nation and the welfare of compatriots on both sides of the Taiwan
Straits."
The cynosural meeting also
marks the two parties' efforts to put an official end to the decades-old
ideological conflicts and hostility between them, and to usher in a new
stage for their party-to-party relationship.
In addition to thawing the
historical feuds, the meeting, scheduled on the anniversary of the first
"Wang-Koo Meeting" held between the CPC and the then-incumbent KMT in
1993, also symbolizes the mainland's utmost goodwill and marked
flexibility in handling the Taiwan issue.
Such a meeting assumes
particular significance against the backdrop of the escalating tensions
across the Taiwan Straits as a result of the Taiwan authorities' deviation
from the one-China principle and the "1992 Consensus" and their continuous
push for the island province's secession from China in recent years.
In response to the uproar of
secessionist activities maneuvered by the Taiwan authorities, China's top
legislature, the National People's Congress, enacted in March an
Anti-secession Law aimed at checking and preventing "Taiwan independence."
However, the principled
mainland has repeatedly said the use of force would be the "last resort"
for settling the Taiwan issue.
In the four-point guidelines
on cross-Straits relations he set forth in early March, Hu, the CPC
leader, has said the Chinese government would unswervingly adhere to the
seeking of a "peaceful resolution" of the Taiwan issue.
In fact, such goodwill is
evident in a series of policies adopted by the mainland to facilitate
economic, cultural, educational and personnel exchanges with Taiwan. And
these policies have attracted an increasing number of Taiwan people to
invest, work, study and live in the rapidly-developing mainland.
As cross-Straits trade and
economic ties have turned closer, and cultural and personnel exchanges
been further boosted, maintaining the peaceful status-quo across the
Taiwan Straits and striving for common prosperity have become a notion
more and more deeply rooted among the mainland people, who always regard
the Taiwan compatriots as their "flesh-and-blood brothers." Cross-Straits
cooperation has also become an increasingly popular concept among the
people and various political parties in Taiwan.
In January, the KMT party
effectively helped launch the first direct, non-stop charter flight scheme
across the Taiwan Straits in 56 years during the Chinese lunar new year, a
move widely hailed by people across the Straits.
A delegation led by KMT
Vice-Chairman Chiang Pin-kung made an "icebreaking trip" to the mainland
in March. The visit led to a 12-point preliminary consensus on further
promoting cross-Straits communications and economic and trade links.
Although smeared by the
Taiwan authorities and diehard secessionists as a so-called "act of
selling out Taiwan," Lien's eight-day mainland mission has found more
supporters than objectors in Taiwan. Surveys conducted by Taiwan media
found that the local people support the trip by a large margin.
In addition to the
high-level reception from the CPC and various local governments, the KMT
delegation from Taiwan also enjoyed a hearty and passionate welcome from
the ordinary mainlanders. Lien's public speeches frequently stirred up
stormy applauses in Nanjing and Beijing, the first two legs of his tour.
The goodwill conveyed by the
mainland during the KMT visit has earned positive response among the
Taiwan people. The same day of the historic meeting between Hu and Lien, a
Taiwan media poll found more than 62 percent of the nearly 1,000
respondents wanted the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) to open
talks with the mainland, while only 19 percent said such talks are not
necessary.
Chairman Lien has said it is
the trend of history and will of the Taiwan people that have brought the
KMT delegation to the mainland. His observation was once again proved by
the successful Friday summit between the two parties.
With the example set by the
CPC and KMT, it is now high time for the Taiwan authorities and the DPP to
answer the call of the people and take concrete actions to promote the
welfare of the Chinese nation. |