TAIPEI — The presidents of
China and Taiwan will meet this weekend in Singapore with a handshake
that will mark a seismic shift in a relationship frozen in enmity since
1949.
When Taiwan’s leader Ma Ying-jeou meets his Chinese
counterpart Xi Jinping it will be an unprecedented official stamp on a
seven-year rapprochement that has seen the launch of direct flights,
trade deals and a tourism boom as the two sides have forged previously
unthinkable ties.
Their split at the end of a civil war on the mainland in
1949 was the start of decades of hostility as self-ruled Taiwan forged
its own identity and developed into a democracy, while Beijing insisted
it was still part of its territory to be reunited by force if necessary.
The island became a cold war outpost with the United
States its major ally, committed to defending Taiwan against any Chinese
aggression.
But when Ma came to power in 2008 promising better
relations would lead to prosperity, ties swiftly warmed with high-level
talks resumed for the first time in over 10 years.
Political sensitivities have meant the burgeoning
relationship has not been overtly played out — the first
government-to-government meetings only took place last year. Now it will
be formally sealed at the highest level.
China hailed the talks as a milestone in a dispatch on the
state Xinhua news agency that said the two sides would “exchange views
on promoting the peaceful development of cross-Strait relations,”
referring to the stretch of water that separates them.
“For the past seven years… the two sides have built up
mutual trust and opened up a path of peaceful development,” it cited
Zhang Zhijun, head of the mainland’s Taiwan affairs office, as saying.
There were few other details on the substance of the
summit. Ma’s spokesman said that the goal is to “secure cross-Strait
peace,” but that there would be no agreement signed nor any joint
statement issued. — AFP
Post a Comment