BEIJING, Dec. 27 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese mainland
issued a set of regulations on Wednesday, lifting restrictions on the activities
of Taiwan journalists in the run-up to and during the 2008 Olympic Games in
Beijing.
The regulations, issued by the Taiwan Affairs Office
of the State Council, will come into force on Jan. 1, 2007, and expire on Oct.
17, 2008.
Similar regulations have already been issued for
foreign journalists reporting on the 2008 Olympics.
Under the new regulations, Taiwan journalists who
hold valid Olympic accreditation cards and passes are entitled to multiple
entries.
Taiwan journalists are no longer required to apply to
provincial authorities for permission to report in areas under their
jurisdiction, but need only obtain prior consent of the organizations or
individuals they want to interview.
The new regulations have simplified the customs
procedures for reporting equipment brought by Taiwan journalists into the
mainland by canceling the requirement of an guarantee letter provided by the
All-China Journalists Association or local Taiwan affairs offices.
The regulations said that Taiwan journalists may
also, through relevant service organizations, hire mainland citizens to assist
them in their reporting activities.
Taiwan journalists are also allowed, on a temporary
basis, to bring in, install and use radio communication equipment after
completing the required application and approval procedures, the regulations
said.
Li Weiyi, spokesman of the Taiwan Affairs Office of
the State Council said the new regulations were "in line with the common
practice of the Olympic Games and would offer more convenience to Taiwan
journalists".
Li said the original regulations, set in 2002, were
still valid but if there were any contradictions between the two, the new
regulations should be taken as standard.
"Our attitude towards cross-Straits exchanges are
open and positive," Li told a press briefing.
Meanwhile, the official also urged Taiwan authorities
to lift a ban that forbids two leading mainland news organizations, People's
Daily and Xinhua News Agency, to station reporters in Taiwan.
In April 2005, Taiwan authorities barred Xinhua News
Agency and People's Daily from stationing reporters in the island. As a result,
only three mainland news organizations are allowed to send journalists and
photographers to Taiwan on a monthly rotation basis.
The Chinese mainland allowed Taiwan media
organizations to station reporters on the mainland in 1993. The Taiwan
authorities announced limited access to journalists from the mainland in 2000.
Before the 2005 ban, five mainland official news
organizations - Xinhua News Agency, People's Daily, China Central Television
(CCTV), China National Radio and China News Service - gained permission to
station reporters in Taiwan.