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SHANGHAI, May 2 (Xinhuaneti)
-- Visiting KMT Chairman Lien Chan from Taiwan said here Monday Taiwan
faces a "crucial moment," when it must decide what direction it will take
in cross-Strait relations.
"Almost all the world's
major countries have placed great importance on the mainland, viewing it
as an important place to improve competitiveness and expand markets," Lien
said at a luncheon with representatives of Taiwan businessmen on the
Chinese mainland.
TAIWAN SHOULD SEIZE THE
CHANCE
"In such a situation, Taiwan
would suffer a serious negative impact if it keeps a closed mind," said
Lien, who is leading a 60-member delegation of the KMT, Taiwan's major
opposition party, on a "journey of peace" to the mainland.
Lien said now is a crucial
time to "seize the market and business opportunities and a way out" on the
mainland.
The KMT was China's ruling
party before 1949, when it lost the civil war to the Communist Party of
China (CPC) and retreated to the island of Taiwan. It ruled Taiwan for
around 50 years before becoming an opposition party.
The mainland has vigorously
pushed for peaceful reunification with Taiwan, while the Taiwan
authorities are trying to sever links with the mainland in attempts to
seek "Taiwan independence. Tensions across the Straits have been high.
The KMT and its "Pan-Blue"
coalition, which as a whole holds a majority in Taiwan's "legislature,"
adhere to the "one-China" principle and seek closer integration with the
mainland.
The delegation, invited by
the CPC Central Committee and its General Secretary Hu Jintao, arrived in
Shanghai Sunday for the last leg of its eight-day mainland visit that
begun on April 26.
Lien said he admires the
rapid economic growth achieved by the mainland, calling the GDP growth of
nearly 10 percent each year "stunning." He urged Taiwan businesses to
"grasp the opportunity."
The room for cooperation
between the two sides is "very great," Lien said. He mentioned marketing,
brand management, business administration, development and manufacturing
as possible sectors of further cooperation.
Taiwan businessmen have
invested in more than 60,000 projects in the mainland, with contractual
investment hitting almost 80 billion US dollars and 40 billion dollars
being actually used.
Indirect trade volume
between the mainland and Taiwan totaled more than 400 billion dollars, and
Taiwan has obtained an accumulated trade surplus of 270 billions dollars.
In 2004 alone, the trade volume across the Straits reached more than 78
billion dollars.
Lien called on the Taiwan
authorities to "act in line with the trend of the times and the common
aspiration of the people" in handling cross-Strait affairs.
ESTABLISHING ECONOMIC
COOPERATION MECHANISM
In his luncheon speech, Lien
also called for establishing an economic cooperation mechanism, a "common
market" mechanism, across the Straits.
Lien said the KMT and the
CPC have agreed to open two forums to promote cross-Strait exchanges, one
on peaceful development and the other on economic, trade and cultural
affairs.
He said an economic and
trade forum has been established, with KMT Secretary-General Lin
Feng-cheng and director of CPC Central Committee's Taiwan Work Office Chen
Yunlin to represent the two sides in the forum.
"Establishment of such a
platform is of vital importance," said Lien. "As currently there's still
no sign of official contacts between the two sides."
He said it's best for
authorities to push for the cross-Strait economic cooperation mechanism,
but in the absence of efforts from the authorities, the KMT hopes to play
a role through promoting the establishment of the two forums.
"We cannot just let time
pass," said Lien.
Speaking at a press
conference earlier Monday morning, Lien said promoting all-round economic
and trade exchanges is the biggest goal of the visit, saying it is "the
most practical issue that could be approached at this stage."
AUTHORITIES' ROLE
Lien urged the Taiwan
authorities to actively prepare for talks with the mainland side on
signing a peace accord, saying that ending the hostility would surely
bring a more peaceful environment to Taiwan.
He said the KMT and the CPC
have reached agreement on promoting the signing of a peace accord between
the two sides of the Straits.
He also urged the Taiwan
authorities to push for the implementation of the 12-item consensus
reached between KMT Vice-Chairman Chiang Pin-kung and director of the CPC
Central Committee's Taiwan Work Office Chen Yunlin in an earlier KMT
mainland visit, saying they are far more significant to Taiwan than to the
mainland.
"General Secretary Hu Jintao
told me the 12 items are all for the benefits of Taiwan people," Lien said
at the press conference.
MEETS WANG DAOHAN
On Monday Morning, the KMT
delegation met with Wang Daohan, president of the mainland-based
Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) in Shanghai,
to express its hope of resuming cross-Strait dialogue.
Wang said despite the
political differences between the two sides, "We're all Chinese linked by
the same blood and cultural background," said Wang. "Therefore we should
work together to promote peace, development and cooperation in
cross-Straits relations, strive for a win-win situation and contribute to
the glorious future of the Chinese nation."
VISIT PRAISED
The visit has been widely
praised by the China media as a big success. The visit culminated on April
29 with a meeting in Beijing between CPC leader Hu Jintao and KMT leader
Lien Chan, the first meeting between top leaders of the two parties since
the 1960s.
A press communique issued
after the meeting says the CPC and KMT have agreed to work together to
promote cross-Straits exchanges and cooperation in five aspects, including
promoting the formal end of the state of hostility and pushing all-around
economic cooperation and trade across the Straits.
The KTM delegation is due to
leave Shanghai for Taiwan Tuesday. Earlier, it had visited Nanjing,
Beijing and Xi'an. |