China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Scholars: Letter from Taiwan isn’t good news

Announceme­nt failed to mention 1992 Consensus, casting shadow on relations

- By LUOWANGSHU luowangshu @chinadaily.com.cn

The new chief of the Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation took office on Monday with no mention of the “1992 Consensus”, showing that the island’s administra­tion is reluctant to pursue stronger cross-Straits ties, scholars said.

Island leader Tsai Ing-wen’s office announced at theendof August that Tien Hung-mao would be the new chairman of the foundation. But a letter from the foundation to its mainland counterpar­t, the Associatio­n for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits, informing it of Tien’s appointmen­t, did not mention the consensus, which acknowledg­es that the mainland and Taiwan belong to one China.

“The mainland has never softened on the consensus,” said Zhu Songling, director of Beijing Union University’s Institute of Cross-Straits Relations. “The only way to push forward communicat­ion is for Taiwan to recognize the one-China principle.”

“Connect or halt — it depends on Taiwan’s attitude,” he said.

Liu Xiangping, head of the Institute of Taiwan Studies at Nanjing University, said that if Taiwan does not uphold the consensus, a preconditi­on of the mainland for increased communicat­ion, then any policy or mechanism, including the naming of the foundation chief, is meaningles­s.

“The key is not to appoint any specific person to task of expanding communicat­ion across the S traits ,” he said. “The key is to uphold the 1992 Consensus and recognize the one-China principle .”

“Tien belongs to the proindepen­dence camp, and is expected to make no effort to improve cross-Straits ties,” Liu said.

The top foundation post had been vacant since Tsai took office in May.

Taiwan-based Economic Daily News reported that foundation members had resigned after Tien took office.

“It shows that people who want to improve cross-Straits relations are disappoint­ed,” Liu said.

On Monday, Chen Deming, president of the Associatio­n for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits, said in a statement: “Only if the foundation is authorized to recognize the 1992 Consensus — the political foundation of the one-China principle — can authorized communicat­ion between both sides resume.”

The only way to push forward communicat­ion is for Taiwan to recognize the one-China principle.” Zhu Songling, director of Beijing Union University’s Institute of Cross-Straits Relations

 ??  ?? Tien Hung-mao, chairman of the Straits Exchange Foundation
Tien Hung-mao, chairman of the Straits Exchange Foundation

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