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BEIJING, May 24 (Xinhuanet) -- Although he did not use the term of "one country on each side", Chen Shui-bian's May 20 speech brimmed with the concept of "Taiwan Independence" and foreshadowing of his attempt to split China, said Zhang Mingqing, spokesman for the
Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, at a news conference here Monday.
Zhang said that although Chen did not mention the
time frame for writing a new "constitution" in 2006 and the referendum leading
to "Taiwan Independence", he used ambiguous words, like "his personal proposal"
and "the common understanding of the vast majority that will be reached", to
describe his stances on whether the sovereignty, territory and "Reunification or
Independence" issue would be included in the proposed "constitutional reform".
"Chen's expression carried the foreshadowing of his
attempt to split China," Zhang acknowledged, "which will undermine the stability
of the Taiwan Straits and the Asia-Pacific region."
Chen's speech, said Zhang, revealed that he still
persisted in his stance of seeking "Taiwan Independence" and he had no sincerity
to improve the cross-Straits relations.
The statement issued by the Taiwan Work Office under
the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the Taiwan Affairs
Office of the State Council on May 17, noted Zhang, has explicitly demonstrated
the Chinese Mainland's sincerity toward peaceful reunification, voiced the
common aspiration and firm resolve of the 1.3 billion Chinese people to
safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity and offered a package
of proposals for improved cross-Straits relations under the one-China principle.
The statement, as the Chinese Mainland's important
document on the Taiwan question, has drawn a lot of positive response from the
Taiwanese community and the international community, Zhang said.
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