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Related: KMT
trip to benefit cross-Straits relations
BEIJING, Mar. 29 -- Chiang Pin-Kun, vice-chairman of the Taiwan-based Chinese Kuomintang party (KMT), is hoping his visit to the mainland will
ease recently strained cross-Strait tensions as well as promote economic ties.
 Chiang Pin-kun, vice chairman of
Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang, is surrounded by reporters upon his arrival in
Guangzhou March 28, 2005. Chiang leads a delegation to visit the mainland aimed
at easing cross-strait tensions. (newsphoto)
Chiang, who is leading a 34-member delegation,
arrived at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in the Guangdong provincial
capital Monday afternoon.
The vice-chairman's arrival marks the KMT's first
formal visit to the mainland since the group fled to Taiwan in 1949.
Chiang said he was particularly hoping to help
farmers in Taiwan sell more agricultural produce to the vast mainland market.
Currently, Taiwan's annual agricultural sales to the
mainland are around US$300 million while its agricultural imports from other
provinces, municipalities and regions come to US$500 million.
Spurred by the successful direct charter flight
service during the lunar new year period, Chiang said he would be discussing the
possibility of providing more charter flight services across the Straits during
traditional festivals and even at weekends to meet growing demand from both
sides.
Chiang said he hoped to negotiate with relevant
mainland departments about opening direct cargo transport links cross the Taiwan
Straits, benefiting Taiwan's investors who have set up manufacturing facilities
on the mainland.
Taiwan's investors "can waste no time to put their
products into markets," Chiang said.
In remarks made Monday to Guangdong Governor Huang
Huahua, Chiang hinted that Lien Chan, chairman of the KMT, also wants to visit
the mainland later this year to discuss the possible expansion of economic ties
between the mainland and Taiwan.
Also describing his visit as a trip to cherish the
memory of KMT martyrs,
Chiang and his delegation are scheduled to visit
Guangzhou Huanghuagang Commemoration Park where 72 KMT martyrs were buried this
morning.
Before leaving Guangzhou for Nanjing, capital of East
China's Jiangsu Province, Chiang met local representatives of Taiwan investors,
to discuss ways of smoothing business across the straits..
In addition to Guangzhou and Nanjing, Chiang and his
delegation will also visit Beijing to meet senior Communist Party and government
officials. Chiang will return to Taiwan on April 1.
Guangdong Governor Huang Huahua Monday welcomed his
guests from across the water and said he expected to further expand economic
ties between Guangdong and Taiwan.
Huang promised to offer even better service to the
Taiwan investors in his province and to protect their legal interests.
Last year, Guangdong approved a total of 1,073
Taiwan-funded projects with a total investment of US$3.96 billion.
By the end of last year, the southern Chinese
province that borders Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions had
registered a total of 18,440 Taiwan-funded projects and companies, with contract
investments valued at more than US$36.6 billion. So far the province has
attracted an actual investment from Taiwan of more than US$25.6 billion.
Last year, Guangdong purchased products totalling
US$27.4 billion from Taiwan while its exports to the island reached US$2.8
billion.
Guangdong is now home to around 300,000 registered
Taiwan investors and their family members with most living in Guangzhou,
Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Dongguan, Huizhou, Zhongshan, Foshan and other prosperous
cities in the Pearl River Delta.
(Source: China Daily) |