Soong wraps up 9-day mainland visit By Cao Desheng (China Daily) Updated: 2005-05-13 23:51
The mainland's top Taiwan policy-maker announced on Friday that the mainland
will offer to ease restrictions on contacts between the two sides to facilitate
the Taiwan compatriots' cross-Straits trips, and make it easier for Taiwan
residents to study and work on the mainland.
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PFP Chairman James Soong shakes hands with local residents who come
to airport to see him off at the Beijing Capital
Airport Friday. [Xinhua] | Entry and
exit procedures as well as residency applications are to be simplified for
Taiwan residents, said Chen Yunlin, director of the Taiwan Work Office of the
Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee.
"Tuition fees for Taiwan students will be reduced to an equal level with that
of their mainland counterparts and a scholarship is to be set up for them later
this year," Chen said.
He called on the Taiwan authorities to recognize the schooling records of
Taiwan students studying on the mainland as soon as possible to protect their
legitimate rights and interests.
Meantime, the labour departments are working to improve relevant polices to
ease employment law governing Taiwan compatriots who are willing to work on the
mainland, he said.
Under the new policy, Taiwan graduates from mainland universities will enjoy
equal opportunity to work on the mainland with their mainland counterparts, Chen
added.
The announcement came as James Soong, chairman of Taiwan's People First Party
(PFP), wound up his 9-day mainland visit and returned to Taiwan on Friday.
"This is another gesture showing the easing of tensions across the Taiwan
Straits," Chen said, "These moves aim to substantially solve the issues Taiwan
compatriots are concerned about."
"The mainland has demonstrated its sincerity in pooling together wisdom
across the Taiwan Straits to erase past misunderstandings between the two
sides," Soong said before boarding the plane to Taiwan.
The PFP leader said that only peace could bring happiness to people on both
sides. He pledged to bring the mainland's "goodwill and sincerity" that he
experienced back to Taiwan.
No problem will be left unsolved under the one-China framework, said Soong,
vowing to try his utmost to make the proposals jointly launched by the CPC and
PFP during his visit a reality.
Dubbing his visit a "bridge-building journey", Soong hoped his mainland visit
could build "a bridge of mutual trust, communication and soul" between the
Chinese people on both sides of the Taiwan Straits.
On Thursday, after a meeting between Soong and the General Secretary of CPC
Central Committee Hu Jintao, the two proposed a "two sides, one China" formula
as a basis for Beijing and Taipei to resume talks.
The "two sides, one China" wording redefines a 1992 consensus between the
mainland and Taiwan that the island and mainland form "one China".
Lin Yung-yao, vice-chairman of the Beijing Association for Taiwanese
Entrepreneurs, said that if the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP)
administration continues to set up obstacles to the development of cross-Straits
relations, they will only come to a political dead end.
Taiwan business woman Huang Mee Lian, chairwoman of Ever Rich Holdings Co
Ltd, said a ruling party must consider public opinion when it formulates its
policies.
"We appeal to the DPP administration to take positive actions in handling the
cross-Straits relations to protect the interests of Taiwan business people on
the mainland," she said.
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