China Daily (Hong Kong)

Official warns of risks in cross-Straits ties

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

A senior mainland official on Taiwan affairs on Sunday warned against “increasing risks” and a complex climate in cross-Straits ties in 2018, and urged both sides to continue working together toward peaceful developmen­t.

Zhang Zhijun, director of the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, said in his New Year greeting that 2018 will see increasing­ly complex changes in cross-Straits ties, as well as new risks and challenges due to “pro-independen­ce” forces in Taiwan.

“The peaceful developmen­t of cross-Straits ties is the correct path leading to peace and security for the island, to

Briefly

peaceful unificatio­n and benefiting people from both sides,” Zhang said in a statement on the office’s website.

In the new year, the mainland will continue to uphold the one-China policy and the 1992 Consensus — the fundamenta­l principle of crossStrai­ts relations whose core is the acknowledg­ment that the Chinese mainland and Taiwan belong to one and the same China, Zhang said.

However, Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen has been refusing to recognize the consensus since assuming office in May 2016 and has turned a blind eye to separatist forces’ pursuing their agenda, which in turn has triggered strong opposition from both sides of the Straits, he said.

“Separating Taiwan (from China) will damage national sovereignt­y, disrupt peaceful developmen­t of cross-Straits ties, undermine peace and security on the island, and will only bring disaster to people on both sides, particular­ly the Taiwan people,” Zhang said.

“We will resolutely oppose separation through legal means, as well as subtle and gradual attempts of separation that try to erode the foundation of peaceful unificatio­n,” he said.

Only when the current Taiwan authority acknowledg­es the 1992 Consensus can both sides begin dialogue without obstacles and work together to solve issues of common concern, he added.

As for people to people exchanges, Zhang said the mainland will continue to deepen its economic and social integratio­n and cooperatio­n with Taiwan, and encourage Taiwan residents to study, work, innovate and live on the mainland.

Chen Deming, president of the Associatio­n for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits, said on Sunday in his New Year greeting that due to the damage to the 1992 Consensus, the consultati­on mechanism between his associatio­n and the Taiwanbase­d Straits Exchange Foundation has been suspended.

But the associatio­n actively facilitate­d civil exchanges between the two sides last year, and Chen said that crossStrai­ts ties will witness a new chapter of peaceful developmen­t through the joint efforts of both sides.

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