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BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Beijing warned
Wednesday that cross-Straits relations may face a rocky future if Taiwan leader
Chen Shui-bian continues his pro-independence push over the next four years.
 Li Weiyi, a spokesman with the
Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.
[newsphoto/file] | Li Weiyi, a spokesman with the
Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, also ruled out the possibility of
resuming cross-Straits talks if Chen does not accept the one-China principle.
At the first regular news conference since Taiwan's
March 20 "presidential" election, Li condemned Chen for his latest advocacy of a
splittist plan.
In media interviews following his highly disputed
re-election, the Taiwan leader has stated time and again his intention to hold a
referendum for the drafting of a new "constitution" in 2006 and enacting the
document in 2008.
"In reality, this is a naked Taiwan independence
timetable," said Li, adding that Chen is actually trying to cheat the Taiwanese
public and world opinion by claiming that his plan will not change the
cross-Straits status quo.
He cautioned that to push through such a
pro-independence timetable "is set to result in tensions and danger in the
Taiwan Straits."
While promoting peaceful reunification between the
Chinese mainland and Taiwan, Beijing has not renounced the use of force if
Taiwan declares independence.
The spokesman told reporters that what Chen has done
during his four years in office is full testimony to his persistent push for
Taiwan's independence.
He stressed that Chen's obstinate adherence to the
separatist stance has created chaos in Taiwan society, caused serious damage to
cross-Straits ties and posed a direct threat to peace and stability in the
Asia-Pacific region.
Commenting on Chen's recent statement that mainstream
Taiwan public opinion is protecting the island against the mainland, Li said the
leader's remarks reflect his real intention to push for independence and stir
confrontation.
The March 20 referendum, which was an attempt to
provoke the mainland, showed that most Taiwanese people hope for stability and
development in bilateral ties, the spokesman said.
Li blamed the current stalemate in cross-Straits
talks on Chen's refusal to embrace the one-China principle that Taiwan and the
mainland are part of China.
"The one-China principle is the basis for restarting
cross-Straits negotiations," he said. "And we will not change the stance."
Since taking power on May 20, 2000, Chen has rejected
the one-China principle, cherished by Beijing, and has agreed to discuss only
the issue of a future one China.
Beijing and Taipei began bilateral negotiations
through semi-official bodies in the early 1990s due to the absence of official
links.
But the talks were broken off after former Taiwan
leader Lee Teng-hui introduced the "two states'' theory in July 1999 and the
deadlock in bilateral relations has been maintained during Chen's four-year
term.
At the news briefing, Li also criticized a Taiwanese
plan to fingerprint mainland visitors, calling it discriminatory.
"We oppose this discriminatory measure towards
mainland compatriots,'' said the spokesman.
Under the Taiwanese policy, all mainland people are
to be fingerprinted when applying for family reunions and temporary or permanent
stays in Taiwan.
But the plan, due to take effect last week, had been
postponed because the Immigration Bureau has not acquired the necessary
equipment, according to Taiwanese media reports.
(China Daily) |