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Taiwan PFP leader to begin mainland trip
The leader of Taiwan's second-largest opposition party is expected to arrive at Xi’an, Shaanxi Province, on Thursday, to help “build a bridge of trust, cooperation and communication between the two sides” of the Taiwan Straits.
Soong, 63, was once a leading figure of the KMT before founding his own party in 2000. The PFP has 34 seats in the 225-member Taiwan local parliament, and is in an alliance with the KMT to form a majority opposition. During a press conference on the eve of his departure, Soong said he opposed firmly Taiwan independence. "We strongly oppose Taiwan independence," he said. "It is a road that would lead to a dead end, and it has never been an option of the PFP. Taiwan independence would only bring in disaster and cannot solve the dispute across the Taiwan Straits." As he left Taiwan Thursday, Soong downplayed suggestions that he was to use the trip to deliver a message from the island's pro-independence leader Chen Shui-bian to Beijing. "The PFP hopes to build a bridge of trust, cooperation and communication between the two sides," Soong told reporters at the airport in Taipei shortly before his departure. "I am not doing this for any individual but to resolve the misunderstandings that have existed between the two sides in decades in order to usher in a new era." Soong's trip comes only days after Lien Chan, leader of KMT, returned from a landmark visit to the mainland. Soong will pay tribute to Sun Yat-sen, the founder of the KMT, in the eastern city of Nanjing on Saturday. He will also visit Shanghai and Changcha, his birthplace. Beijing is on his itinerary early next week. Last Friday, KMT chairman Lien Chan shook hands with CPC General Secretary Hu Jintao and agreed to end decades of hostilities between the civil war enemies. Their move increased pressure in the Taiwan island and world community on Chen to also mend fences with the mainland, analysts say. Beijing refuses to deal with Chen, of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), unless he first renounces his independence vision, and embrace “one China” principle. Neither Lien nor Soong have any authority to conclude agreements with the mainland, but observers have speculated that their diplomatic efforts are putting pressure on Chen to take a more pro-active stance. "Lien's successful mainland trip sets an example for Taiwan authorities and was also a great encouragement of public opinion in Taiwan," Sun Shengliang, a Beijing-based Taiwan affairs researcher, told Xinhua. |
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