New Straits Times

‘CHINA SEEKS PEACEFUL TAIWAN REUNIFICAT­ION’

Beijing’s Taiwan Affairs head makes call ahead of presidenti­al and parliament­ary polls

- TAIPEI

THE head of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office yesterday called on Taiwan’s people to promote the process of “peaceful reunificat­ion”, saying it was the common desire of people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Song Tao’s message, which comes less than two week’s before Taiwan holds presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections on Jan 13, follows President Xi Jinping’s remarks in his New Year Eve’s address that China’s “reunificat­ion” with Taiwan was inevitable.

“The motherland will eventually be reunified and it will inevitably be reunified,” Song said in his New Year’s message on his office’s website.

This is the common desire and common mission of people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait, Song added.

Taiwan’s people should “promote cross-strait relations to return to the right track of peaceful developmen­t and promote the process of peaceful reunificat­ion of the motherland”, he said.

Taiwan’s government rejects

China’s sovereignt­y claims. Both the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party and largest opposition party, the Kuomintang, say only Taiwan’s people can decide their future.

China has offered Taiwan a “one country, two systems” model of autonomy, but no mainstream Taiwanese party supports it.

Song reiterated China’s support for “one country, two systems” and opposition to Taiwan’s formal independen­ce or “interferen­ce by external forces”.

His message made no mention of the election, which the Taiwan Affairs Office has cast as a choice between war and peace.

China has continued military pressure around the island, ended some tariff cuts for Taiwan and threatened economic measures as the vote neared.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? An election campaign billboard showing Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party presidenti­al candidate Lai Ching-te (left) and legislativ­e candidate Hsu Shu-Hua on a building in Taipei recently.
AFP PIC An election campaign billboard showing Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party presidenti­al candidate Lai Ching-te (left) and legislativ­e candidate Hsu Shu-Hua on a building in Taipei recently.

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