Trade talks with Taiwan to continue
Updated: 2014-06-12 06:52
By An Baijie (China Daily)
|
||||||||
Mainland authorities have not halted trade negotiations with Taiwan after a service trade pact was blocked by the island's legislators, a mainland spokeswoman said on Wednesday.
Fan Liqing, spokeswoman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said administrative authorities and relevant industries across the Straits have maintained communications and exchanges over possible trade-in-goods agreements and a mechanism for dispute resolution.
She made the remarks at a regular news conference in response to a media report that the mainland had suspended dialogue with Taiwan on such issues.
"It is untrue," she said of the report. "We have not changed our attitude on enhancing cross-Straits economic cooperation and pushing forward on follow-up agreements to the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement."
The mainland would like to share the opportunities of economic development with Taiwan compatriots, which is a consistent policy, she said, adding that cross-Straits economic cooperation should not be hampered by the recent incident.
Her comments came after the suspension of a cross-Straits service trade pact, which was signed a year ago but was boycotted by the island's legislative authorities. The pact aims to open up 80 of the mainland's service sectors to Taiwan and 64 Taiwan sectors to the mainland.
Protests launched by hundreds of students that lasted for weeks forced the pact to be returned to the island's legislative authority for detailed review in April.
At the news conference, Fan also said that although the mainland and Taiwan have yet to be reunified, the fact that both belong to one China has never changed, and China's sovereignty and territory have always been indivisible.
"Issues concerning China's sovereignty and territorial integrity should be decided by all Chinese, including compatriots in Taiwan," she said while commenting on Tainan Mayor William Lai's remarks about "Taiwan independence".
During his recent visit to Shanghai, Lai said Taiwan's future should be decided by its 23 million people.
The mainland firmly opposes "Taiwan independence" and secessionist attempts, Fan said.
Cross-Straits communications have been enhanced in recent years, and 1.84 million mainland tourists had visited Taiwan by late April since the island lifted the ban on mainland individual travelers in June 2011, she said.
anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 06/12/2014 page3)
- World Cup fever grips Chinese soccer fans
- Former Alibaba VP wants his documentary on US TV
- Consul general welcomed
- Tender moments of world leaders with their children
- Chinese fleet joins others for RIMPAC exercise
- Obama visits native American reservation
- Clinton has reasons to run at her ready
- Angelina Jolie shines at summit against sexual violence
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Crackdown on terrorist attacks |
My China Story: Meeting the master |
Tongues tied around tatu-bola |
A market that's not such a hot property |
Tough regime cranks out test winners |
Some lab animals get reprieve from testing |
Today's Top News
US should 'attune itself to China's rise'
US hay helping China's dairy needs
Chinese TV show expands to US
Former US congressman: Diaoyu belongs to China
US options could help combat advances by Iraqi militants
US applauds voting in Afghan presidential polls
Oregon high school shooter's parents offer apology
Army: Bergdahl 'looked good' after returning to US
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |