NEW YORK - Taiwan's opposition leader and
potential "presidential" front-runner Ma Ying-jeou called on Monday for
multilateral talks with the mainland to avoid
confrontation.
Ma Ying-jeou, the
mayor of Taipei City, speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations in New
York March 20, 2006. Ma Ying-jeou is the chairman of the opposition
Kuomintang (KMT) Party and is a strong candidate for the "presidency" in
2008. [Reuters] |
"Without negotiations, I think the current state across
the Taiwan Strait could move from stagnation to confrontation," Ma told the
Council on Foreign Relations in New York.
Relations with the mainland have been strained since February when
pro-independence "president" Chen Shui-bian scrapped the National Unification
Council (NUC), a dormant but politically significant body aimed at one day
reuniting the mainland and Taiwan.
Ma, the mayor of Taipei, is chairman of the main opposition Kuomintang (KMT),
or the Nationalist Party, which favours closer ties with the mainland. He called
the abolition of the council "unnecessary and unwise."
Ma, 55, seen by many as the opposition's best bet for victory in the 2008
polls, has said he would reopen talks and aim to sign a peace agreement with the
mainland if his party regained power in the next "presidential" election.
In comments to reporters after his speech, Ma said that in the meantime,
talks should include ruling and opposition parties in the mainland and Taiwan as
well as "governments".
"We in the KMT have already established a dialogue with the Chinese Communist
Party. We also call upon the the mainland and all governments to talk. Otherwise
I'm really afraid the situation will deteriorate," Ma said, referring to the
"escalation of confrontation" caused by the NUC matter.
Beijing refuses to deal with Chen, whose Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
stands for an independent Taiwan identity.
The KMT, or Nationalists, once ruled all of China and fled to Taiwan after
losing the Chinese civil war in 1949. The party enjoyed uninterrupted rule of
the island until 2000, when it lost to Chen's DPP.