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BEIJING, April 1 -- Taiwan on Friday declined to
accept a goodwill gift of two giant pandas from the mainland, a decision that
has met with criticism from across the Taiwan Straits.
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| Pictured here are the two pandas chosen by
the mainland as a goodwill gift to Taiwan. (Photo:
Xinhua) |
One mainland expert on Taiwan described the decision
as "an unwise and short-sighted move" that will only increase Taiwan people's
dissatisfaction with the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP).
The island's "council of agriculture" announced late
on Friday that Taiwan was unable to accept the animals because they would not
receive proper care in Taiwan as required by animal protection laws and
international agreements.
"Under present circumstances, we cannot accept the
pandas in Taiwan," said Lee Tao-sheng, deputy director of the forestry bureau
under the "council of agriculture."
He added that the decision had been made in
accordance with "wild animal conservation laws," adding that "the majority of
conservation groups and experts were opposed to importing the giant pandas."
Lee said applications to house the pandas from Taipei
City Zoo and the Leofoo Village Theme Park, located in Hsinchu County, did not
focus enough on research and education.
"The current plans to exhibit and strengthen the
teaching of wildlife protection are not concrete enough," Lee told reporters
after final discussions by a panel of experts, without elaborating.
The zoo and the park, however, said they had invested
heavily in facilities for the endangered animals and could accommodate them.
Beijing made the panda offer as a goodwill gesture
last May when Lien Chan, the then leader of Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang
(KMT), visited the mainland.
The pandas were picked from 11 animals at the Wolong
Giant Panda Research Centre in Southwest China's Sichuan Province. They were
named Tuantuan and Yuanyuan, from the Chinese word tuanyuan which means
"reunion."
Friday's announcement came a week after Taiwan leader
Chen Shui-bian urged mainland leaders to keep the pandas in their natural
habitat.
Although the mainland gesture was well received by
more than 70 per cent of Taiwan people, the "independence"-minded Chen and his
DPP administration have repeatedly denounced the offer as a propaganda ploy.
Li Jiaquan, a senior researcher with the Institute of
Taiwan Studies under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Taipei's
decision was politically motivated.
"The sole reason is that Chen and his DPP
administration fear closer cross-Straits exchanges will foil their secessionist
attempts," he told China Daily.
"They have done their best to worsen cross-Straits
relations rather than seek peace and stability."
The researcher stressed that the DPP's rejection of
the pandas went against the common aspirations of people across the Straits for
stable bilateral ties.
"By putting their self-interests above public
welfare, the DPP will further erode people's support for them," Li said.
The opposition KMT immediately criticized the DPP
administration's rejection of the pandas.
"There is absolutely no doubt that the rejection was
made out of political considerations," said Chang Jung-kung, director of the
KMT's mainland affairs division.
(Source: China Daily) |