Beijing's Taiwan Affairs
Office yesterday said it hoped to resume cross-Straits talks
soon but insisted that the one-China principle was a
precondition.
Chen Yunlin, director of the
State Council's Taiwan Affairs Office, said: "Our
efforts to push for the resumption of cross-Straits talks
and negotiations on the basis of the one-China principle
will never slacken."
The top
Taiwan affairs official added that everything can be
discussed under the one-China principle, including any issue
of concern to Taiwan authorities.
Chen
made the remarks in Beijing yesterday at a ceremony to mark
the 10th anniversary of the semi-official Association for
Relations across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS).
The association was established on
December 16, 1991. It engaged in talks with its Taiwan
counterpart -- the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) --
between March 1992 and July 1999, in the absence of official
links between Beijing and Taipei.
The
talks were broken off after former Taiwan leader Lee
Teng-hui introduced his notorious "two states'' theory
on July 9, 1999, which defines cross-Straits relations as a
state-to-state relationship.
In a
prepared speech at yesterday's ceremony, association
president Wang Daohan said Beijing ''has always had the
utmost sincerity" in its efforts to strive for an early
resumption of talks with the Straits Exchange Foundation.
He said the long interruption in
cross-Straits dialogue has greatly hurt the immediate
interests of people on both sides of the Taiwan Straits,
especially those of Taiwanese compatriots.
"Now it is high time that the ARATS and
SEF restarted their talks on the basis of their
consensus," the top mainland negotiator said.
Wang also called for the establishment
of direct trade, transport and postal links between the
mainland and Taiwan as soon as possible to benefit people
across the Straits.
Wang said the mainland and
Taiwan should seize the historic opportunity to strengthen
their economic cooperation following their entry into the
World Trade Organization.
Both Chen and
Wang, however, stressed that it was important that Taipei
accept the one-China principle and 1992 consensus before
cross-Straits talks could resume.
Chen
said: "Whether cross-Straits talks can be resumed and
the stalemate in bilateral ties can be broken nonetheless
depends on the Taiwan authorities' attitude towards the
one-China principle and 1992 consensus."
Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian, of the
pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party, has refused
to accept the one-China principle. He denied the existence
of the 1992 consensus after he took power in May last year.
The one-China principle holds that
there is only one China in the world, that the Chinese
mainland and Taiwan are both part of China and that China's
sovereignty and territorial integrity cannot be separated.
(China Daily December 17, 2001)