Taiwan to Begin Indirect Flights to Mainland China
Beijing, Jan. 24 2003 (VOA News) -- Taiwan prepares
for landmark indirect flights to China this weekend.
The move comes as Beijing calls for regular, direct
links between China and the island to be established
as soon as possible.
On
Sunday, a Taiwanese commercial airline will for the
first time fly to communist China - although not quite
directly. The plane must stop either in Hong Kong
or Macau, two of China's Special Administrative Regions
with relative autonomy from Beijing.
Ever
since Nationalists fled the mainland after their defeat
by Communist troops in 1949, Taiwan has banned direct
links out of fear for its national security.
But
16 round trip flights have now been scheduled across
the Taiwan Strait to bring Taiwanese people living
on the mainland back home for the Lunar New Year.
The flights are being seen as an important step toward
the establishment of regular, direct air links between
Taiwan and China.
At
a news conference in Beijing Friday, a spokesman for
China's Taiwan Affairs Office, Li Weiyi, welcomed
the move. But he stressed that China would step up
efforts to establish direct links with Taiwan in all
areas: transport, trade and communication, as soon
as possible.
Mr.
Li says China is trying to make a breakthrough on
regular, direct air links before the end of the year
and he urged Taiwan to resume a formal dialogue with
China.
He
says the two sides can conduct talks as equal partners,
about any topic, including "sensitive political
issues," as long as Taiwan accepts the "one
China principle."
Taiwan
and China have been at a political stalemate because
of a dispute over the island's sovereignty. China
claims Taiwan as its own territory, and has not renounced
the use of force to recover the island. But Beijing
has gradually softened its rhetoric toward the island.
--
Leta Hong Fincher
- Voice of America in Beijing
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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