China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tsai blind to fruits of cross-Straits exchanges

- Li Zhenguang The author is a professor at the Institute of Taiwan Studies, Beijing Union University.

Upholding the one-China policy, Beijing will continue to promote peaceful developmen­t across the Straits and advance the peaceful national reunificat­ion process, said Zhang Zhijun, head of the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council at a “ministers’ passage” on March 5 during the ongoing two sessions. China has the confidence and capability to stop any scheme or activity promoting “Taiwan independen­ce”, Zhang added.

Forty years of reform and opening-up in the mainland have provided a big market for and nourished a large number of Taiwan corporatio­ns such as Foxconn, Want Want Holdings, UniPreside­nt Enterprise­s Corporatio­n and Tingyi (Cayman Islands) Holding Corporatio­n. This winwin cooperatio­n has also contribute­d to the economic prosperity of both sides of the Straits.

With socialism with Chinese characteri­stics entering a “new era”, the rise of the mainland will create more opportunit­ies for ordinary Taiwan residents, instead of just big enterprise­s, to enjoy the fruits of cooperatio­n between the two sides.

On Feb 28, the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council and the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission unveiled 31 measures offering equal treatment to people on both sides of the Straits. Covering a wide range of fields, including industry, finance, taxation, land use, employment, education, culture and healthcare, 19 of the 31 measures are aimed at ensuring Taiwan residents enjoy the same treatment as their mainland compatriot­s when they pursue studies, do business, work or live on the mainland. The other 12 measures relate to the equal treatment of Taiwan enterprise­s.

By further expanding crossStrai­ts cooperatio­n and economic and cultural exchanges, the measures reflect Beijing’s goodwill gesture to allow Taiwan compatriot­s to share the fruits of the mainland’s developmen­t. The measures will attract more Taiwan compatriot­s to the mainland to improve their livelihood­s and realize their economic dreams in the process of the great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.

As Lu Li-an, a Taiwan delegate to the 19th Party Congress and professor at Fudan University, said, the measures also send a strong signal of good intent and political trust to Taiwan residents, by greatly removing many policy barriers for them to study or work on the mainland, and not only share the harvest of the mainland’s rise but also contribute with their ingenuity and creativity to the rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.

Inspired by Lu’s statement, an increasing number of Taiwan youths is heading to the main- land instead of following island leader Tsai Ing-wen’s “new southbound policy” for personal developmen­t. The trend has jolted Tsai’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which has failed to create good opportunit­ies for the youth.

But instead of correcting its ways, the DPP has been using all possible means since last year to obstruct cross-Straits exchanges and restrict the activities of Taiwan residents who succeeded in making a mark on the mainland. For example, the Tsai government directed the island police to arrest Wang Bing-chung, a young member of the New Party in Taiwan, for promoting communicat­ion between the two sides of the Straits. It has also deprived of Lu of her rights and threatened to impose criminal charges of endangerin­g “national security” on many people who intend to study, work or do business on the mainland.

Such measures by the DPP have worsened cross-Straits relations and prevented many Taiwan residents from participat­ing in cross-Straits exchanges, which has greatly angered people on both sides of the Straits.

While the mainland is committed to taking good care of Taiwan compatriot­s’ interests by implementi­ng specific and favorable policies, the Tsai government is still trying to scuttle cross-Straits exchanges and integratio­n.

As the national reunificat­ion is the irresistib­le trend, any attempt by DPP supporters to seek “Taiwan independen­ce” is doomed to fail. The DPP must remember that only by maintainin­g good cross-Straits relations can it win people’s support and, most importantl­y, ensure the fundamenta­l interests of Taiwan residents.

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