The Mercury

China-Taiwan talks in Singapore

- Taipei

CHINESE President Xi Jinping will hold talks with the leader of neighbouri­ng Taiwan on Saturday, the first such meeting between the two political rivals since the Chinese civil war ended in 1949, and coming weeks before elections on the island.

The meeting in Singapore coincides with rising anti-China sentiment in Taiwan ahead of the presidenti­al and parliament­ary polls in January which the pro-China Kuomintang is likely to lose to the opposition Democratic Progressiv­e Party, which traditiona­lly favours independen­ce from China.

Taiwanese President Ma Yingjeou, who steps down next year because of term limits, has made improving economic links with China a key policy since he took office in 2008. He has signed landmark business and tourism deals, though there has been no progress in resolving their political difference­s.

Andrew Hsia, the head of the Mainland Affairs Council, Taiwan’s ministry in charge of policy on China, said the meeting underscore­d both sides’ dedication to peace. But Democrat presidenti­al candidate Tsai Ing-wen asked why the announceme­nt had come out of the blue.

“I believe people across the country, like me, felt very surprised,” she said “To let the people know in such a hasty and chaotic manner is damaging to Taiwan’s democracy.”

Political experts said China could be working to shape the result of the elections by trying to show that ties would continue to improve if Taiwan remained ruled by the Kuomintang.

Suspect

Democrat spokesman Cheng Yun-peng said the timing of the meeting was suspect. “How can people not think of this as a political operation intended to affect the election?” he said.

Hsia said the push for the meeting, initiated by the head of China’s Taiwan Affairs Office, was neither rushed nor opaque and there would be no secret deals reached.

“We adhered to open and transparen­t principles and absolutely did not use a rushed, chaotic black-box manner,” he said.

But some analysts said it could backfire, given increasing anti-China protests, especially among the young. In what was seen as a backlash against creeping dependence on China, the Kuomintang was trounced in local elections last year. Younger Taiwanese in particular worry about Beijing’s influence.

“Any meeting between the leaders of China and Taiwan would be delicate, but the coming Taiwanese elections add to the political risks for both sides,” said John Ciorciari, an assistant professor at the Gerald R Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan.

“Ma Ying-jeou and Xi Jinping are doubtlessl­y concerned that their summit will help Tsai Ingwen expand her lead as the Taiwanese electorate drifts away from the mainland.”

Small groups of protesters gathered outside Taiwan’s parliament yesterday.

Communist China deems proudly democratic Taiwan a breakaway province to be taken back, by force if necessary.

China has repeatedly said it will not interfere in the elections but will send a message that good ties with Taiwan can continue only if the island accepts China’s bottom line that there is only “one China”. – Reuters

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