Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions
2007
BEIJING, March 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu
Jintao's four-point guideline on the Taiwan issue has helped cement the bedrock
for mainland-Taiwan relations' peaceful and stable development, said some
lawmakers and advisors on Sunday, while a national parliamentary session
spokesman warned of "severe challenges" to the ties this year.
The guideline, Hu put forward at a panel discussion
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) National
Committee's annual session on March 4, 2005, "enriched the mainland's policies
toward Taiwan and left a far-reaching impact on keeping peace and stability
across the Taiwan Strait," said CPPCC National Committee member Shi Sihao,
counselor of the All-China Federation of Taiwan Compatriots.
In the guideline, Hu said that the mainland will
"never sway in adhering to the one-China principle, never give up efforts to
seek peaceful reunification, never change the principle of placing hope on the
Taiwan people, never compromise in opposing 'Taiwan Independence'."
The four "nevers" were set forth in a consideration
of the actual situation of the cross-Strait relations and have benefited
compatriots on both sides, said Shi on the sideline of the CPPCC National
Committee's annual session that opened here on Saturday.
Thanks to the mainland's active implementation of
Hu's guideline, Shi said, the past two years witnessed deepened cooperation and
exchanges between the two sides, featuring the ice-breaking dialogues between
the Communist Party of China and Taiwan-based Kuomintang, or the Chinese
Nationalist Party, which was then followed by the People First Party and the New
Party.
The two sides also saw improved cooperation in trade,
tourism, education and other sectors. The indirect trade volume between the
mainland and Taiwan hit a record 100 billion U.S. dollars last year, and Taiwan
residents made more than 4.4 million visits to the mainland while the figure for
mainland visits to Taiwan topped 200,000.
The two sides also expanded the charter flight
program, initially only for the Spring Festival, to other traditional Chinese
holidays.
However, at a press conference ahead of the annual
full session of the National People's Congress, which is slated to open on
Monday, spokesman Jiang Enzhu said the cross-Strait ties will face "severe
challenges" in 2007 in spite of the peaceful and stable momentum last year, as
Taiwan authorities' efforts to seek "de jure independence" through the so-called
"constitutional reform" might enter into a "substantive" stage.
A series of "de-sinicizing" moves recently adopted by
the Taiwan authorities in an apparent push for secession showed strains on
mainland-Taiwan relations were lurking around, said Jiang.
Two elections in Taiwan, namely the election of the
"Legislative Yuan" at the end of this year and the Taiwan leader election in
2008, are expected to bring changes to the political environment on the island,
he said.
"(But) no difficulties may challenge our faith in
maintaining the peaceful development of the cross-Straits relations, nor can any
new troubles sway our determination to check 'Taiwan independence'," Jiang said.
Citing the applause from Taiwan farmers last June
when the mainland bought 200 tons of bananas from them, part of the agricultural
cooperation package between the two sides, Chen Jiande, an NPC deputy of Taiwan
origin, said the expanded and deepened exchanges fully demonstrated the care and
love for Taiwan compatriots from the mainland.
The theme of Hu's four-point guideline is peace and
development, and accords with the interests of Taiwan compatriots, Chen said.
Cross-Strait relations become a hot topic when the
country's lawmakers and political advisors convene to discuss the government's
policies at their annual full sessions each year.
"The two sessions this year will further rally our
willpower to propel the peaceful and stable development of cross-Strait
relations in the mutual benefits of both sides," said CPPCC National Committee
member Xu Shiquan, deputy director of the National Research Institute of Taiwan.
