BEIJING, May 11 (Xinhuanet)
-- Visiting Chairman of People First Party James CY Soong reiterated his
persistent stance here Wednesday that his party is resolutely opposed to forces
for "Taiwan independence," which is a dead alley for peace and stability across
the Taiwan Straits.
Soong made the remark when addressing the faculty of Beijing-based Qinghua
University televised live.
Taiwan consciousness not "Taiwan independence"
James CY Soong on Wednesday called on people on the mainland not to take
the "Taiwan consciousness" upheld by the Taiwan people the same as "Taiwan
independence."
The "Taiwan consciousness" formed in history is a mentality of recognizing
the people and land in Taiwan whereas the effort for "Taiwan independence" is
only an attempt to separate Taiwan from China, Soong said in a speech in the
Beijing-based Qinghua University.
The fact that the "Taiwan consciousness" was once manipulated by "Taiwan
independence" forces only proves that such efforts to political control garbled
the real aspirations of the Taiwan people.
Soong slashed the efforts of a small handful of secessionists to take
themselves as Japanese rather than Taiwanese as "casting aside both roots and
essence."
Chinese people can handle own problems peacefully
Visiting Chairman James CY Soong of the People First Party (PFP) in Taiwan
said here Wednesday there is nobody in the world who can hold back the Chinese
people from resolving their own problems "peacefully."
Soong said the historical and realistic factors were so complicated and
difficult to unravel that they constituted a challenge to the wisdom of all
Chinese for "handling our own problems by ourselves."
"History should be taken as a mirror to prevent previous wrongdoing from
happening again," said the PFP chairman.
He warned the mentality of taking history as a "rope" would exert a
negative impact on taking an rational mindset in resolving problems.
Soong said historic experience shows that the real reconciliation is the
"start of a nation's rejuvenation" rather than the result of "compromise of
principle."
Rise of China inevitable trend
The rise of the Chinese nation is an inevitable trend, visiting chairman
James CY Soong of the People First Party (PFP) in Taiwan said here Wednesday
morning in a speech at the Qinghua University.
Citing May 9 issue of US magazine Newsweek's cover story titled "China's
Century", Soong said that the mainland has achieved "stunning achievements"
since its open-up and reforms drive in late 1970s.
For instance, he said, more than 300 million people on the mainland have
shaken off poverty over the past 25 years. Wal-Mart,a supermarket giant who
contributed more than 2 percent of the United State's GDP last year, has 5,000
Chinese suppliers out of its 6,000-plus suppliers.
Chinese has replaced French to become the most favorite foreign language
Americans like to learn, he noted.
As for the filming industry, once regarded as a symbol of American culture,
movie directors like Zhang Yimou from the mainland and An Lee from Taiwan have
became populous names worldwide.
"All of these facts and data have proven that China is rising rapidly," he
said.
Mainland, Taiwan need common development, not warfare
Concerted efforts should be made to build up a common market for common
prosperity across the Taiwan Straits, said James CY Soong on Wednesday.
"Several days ago when I visited Nanjing, an old local man came to me after
passing the tight police defense, saying that 'Mr. Soong, we need no warfare'.
That demonstrated people across the Straits voiced the common aspiration for
peace," said Soong in his speech.
Efforts should be made for making mainland and Taiwan "workshop of the
world and market for the prosperity of our world," he said.
A stable, open, progressive and peaceful China is in the common interest of
the world, he stressed.
Patience, mutual understanding lead to common prosperity
The harmonious living and common prosperity across the Taiwan Straits
require deepening mutual understanding of the people on both sides, James CY
Soong said.
Both sides can start from removing misunderstanding to reaching
understanding, from understanding to dissolving differences, and eventually to
the long-standing pacification, he said.
In such a process, both sides can "score growth" and "regain national
dignity," he said.
Citing an ancient Chinese story to dredge rather than fend off surging
flood, Soong said that the easing of the cross-Straits tension requires the
people on both sides to "make a rational decision."
To make more progress, he encouraged people on both sides to honestly face
history while reserving more patience. "Don't eat too fast, otherwise you may
bite the bowl," he said jokingly.
Soong said that the cross-Straits relations have achieved world-shaking
changes over the past month. "Only by putting people's interests in prior
position can we found a solution to the cross-Straits prosperity," he said.
Soong pledges to promote education exchange
James CY Soong pledged to promote education exchange across the Taiwan
Straits for the benefit of Taiwan students studying on the mainland.
To facilitate these Taiwan students, educational institutions across the
Straits should acknowledge each other's educational records, Soong said when
answering a question after his speech to students and teachers of the
prestigious Qinghua University.
He also hoped that Taiwan students could obtain fair job opportunities
after finishing education on the mainland and receive scholarship from the
mainland universities.
Soong promised to take these issues for talks with related mainland
authorities.