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BEIJING, Feb. 22 (Xinhuanet) -- Ma Ying-Jeo, chairman
of the Chinese Kuomintang (KMT) party in Taiwan, said on Thursday that the two
sides across the Taiwan Straits did reach a consensus in 1992 to accept the
one-China principle, which is a fact that cannot be denied, according to media
reports reaching here from Taipei.
Ma said the "1992 Consensus" did exist, and the
Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which now leads the Taiwan authorities, may
disagree with the spirit of the consensus, but should not denythe fact that
there exists such a consensus.
Ma recalled that the consensus was reached when he
was still "vice-minister" of the "Mainland Affairs Committee" under the Taiwan
authorities. Following many exchanges of letters and documents, both sides
agreed to accept the one-China principle with their own interpretations.
"Without the '1992 Consensus,' it would have been
impossible for any cross-Straits exchanges and interactions to take place," Ma
added.
Ma, also mayor of Taipei, made the remarks in an
interview with the local press on Thursday afternoon, according to Taiwan media
reports.
The remarks came after Taiwan authorities' leader
Chen Shui-bian again denied the existence of the "1992 Consensus" on Thursday
morning.
The "Wang-Koo Talks" and four agreements from the
talks were made possible because of the Consensus, said Ma.
The talks he mentioned refer to the landmark meeting
in 1993 between Wang Daohan, president of the mainland-based Association for
Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) and Koo Chen-fu, chairman of the
Taiwan-based Strait Exchange Foundation (SEF) in Singapore in April 1993. It was
the first ever high-level, non-governmental talks across the Taiwan Straits.
Commenting on Chen Shui-bian's recent remarks on
abolishing the "National Unification Council (NUC)," Ma said Chen had breached
the promises he made himself in 2000 and 2004 that he will not do so during his
office terms.
On May 20, 2000, Chen promised not to declare "Taiwan
independence," incorporate the "two states" idea into the "constitution," change
the so-called country's name, hold a "referendum" on "Taiwan independence," or
to abolish the "NUC" andthe "National Unification Guidelines."
The "NUC" was established in 1990 by the Taiwan
authorities headed by Lee Teng-hui, and fourteen meetings were held after its
establishment. No "NUC" meeting has been held since Chen Shui-bian became head
of the Taiwan authorities.
The "National Unification Guidelines" were issued in
1991, saying both the mainland and Taiwan are under the sovereignty of China and
promoting the state's reunification should be the common task of all Chinese.
The guidelines also outlined a three-phase goal for the realization of China's
reunification.
Political commentators said Chen's remarks proved
that he triedto salvage his power in the Democratic Progressive Party at the
cost of provoking tension across the Taiwan Straits.
An editorial of the Taiwan-based United Daily News on
Jan. 30 said it is quite sure that Chen Shui-bian has no credibility. Enditem
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