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SHANGHAI, May 1 (Xinhuanet)
-- A spokesman for the Chinese Kuomintang (KMT) party said here Sunday the
development of cross-Straits relations is a trend of the times.
The meeting between top
leaders of the Communist Party of China(CPC) and the KMT is of both
far-reaching historic and realistic significance, said spokesman Chang
Jung-kung at a press conference.
He explained that the
realistic significance lies in pushing forward cross-Straits relations.
The "common aspiration" written in the press communique issued by the two
parties marks another height of major cross-Straits exchange following the
"1992 Consensus."
The fruit of KMT Chairman
Lien Chan's visit to the mainland would be acknowledged by the Taiwan
people and supported by the international community, he said.
Lien is leading a KMT
delegation on an eight-day visit to the mainland, which began on Tuesday
and culminated in talks on Friday with Hu Jintao, general secretary of the
CPC Central Committee.
Taiwan's leader Chen
Shui-bian on Sunday said Lien's trip did not go beyond the boundary of an
opposition party. Commenting on this, Chang said the KMT is happy to see
Chen make fairly positive comments and hopes the authority could keep the
same voice within itself.
What the opposition party
could do is to promote the development of cross-Straits relations, and it
is not important whether the KMT delegation will exchange views with the
authority when it returns to Taiwan, he said.
"The key issue is whether
the authority is willing and sincere to jointly promote the cross-Straits
relations in the direction of the press communique," Chang said.
The press communique calls
for, in the first place, promoting the resumption of cross-Straits
consultations on an equal footing, and the KMT is playing the role of
building a bridge and paving the way, he said.
Chang said he believed
Chairman James Soong of the People First Party also hopes to play such a
role, or have the same intention to advance the relaxation of
cross-Straits relations.
The KMT hopes Chen Shui-bian
could accept the suggestions it has continued to offer him over the last
few years -- to resume cross-Straits consultations on an equal footing
with the "1992 Consensus" as the basis.
When answering a question on
the establishment of a platform for regular exchanges between the CPC and
KMT, Chang said this is the opinion of both Lien and Hu, and immediately
after the delegation is back in Taipei, the KMT would begin a study to
find "a proper way" to invite people from all walks of life to join in the
exchanges, via the links between the KMT and CPC.
Asked to comment on the
impact of Lien's visit on Taiwan business people's investment in the
Yangtze River Delta, Chang said that this region has become a key
investment target for Taiwan businessmen.
In the 10-item agreement
reached between the mainland and KMT Vice-Chairman Chiang Pin-kung a month
ago, said Chang, the mainland for the first time expresses the wish to
sign an agreement on investment guarantee for Taiwan businessmen, which
has been strongly proposed by Taiwan over the past decade.
If both sides could work to
this direction, Taiwan businessmen's investment in the Yangtze River Delta
would increase faster and trade and economic cooperation across the Taiwan
Straits would produce mutually beneficial results, he said.
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