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Chinese media warns Taiwan on independence after meet
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 8, 2015


US welcomes China-Taiwan leaders' meeting
Washington (AFP) Nov 7, 2015 - The United States welcomed the historic meeting between the leaders of China and Taiwan on Saturday, calling for further progress in reducing tensions and promoting stability.

China's Xi Jiping and Taiwan's Ma Ying-jeou shook hands in Singapore in the first such meeting between leaders of the two sides since Taiwan broke away from communist-ruled China in 1949.

"The United States welcomes the meeting between leaders on both sides of the Taiwan Strait and the historic improvement in cross-strait relations in recent years," State Department spokesman John Kirby said.

"The United States has a deep and abiding interest in peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, and we encourage further progress by both sides toward building ties, reducing tensions, and promoting stability on the basis of dignity and respect," he said.

The two leaders met for more than an hour and exchanged warm words.

"We are a family whose blood is thicker than water," Xi said.

China, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province, has long pursued a goal of reuniting it with the mainland.

"Behind us there is more than six decades of cross-strait separation. Now before our eyes are the common fruits of the policy of replacing opposition with dialogue," Ma told Xi.

Epic handshake highlights China-Taiwan Summit
Singapore (AFP) Nov 7, 2015 - The first meeting between the leaders of China and Taiwan since their 1949 civil war division was expected to produce a dramatic handshake -- but no one thought it would last 81 seconds.

Ying-jeou took place amid a barrage of camera flashes from a rapt scrum of reporters clamouring to capture the historic summit's start.

There was an audible intake of breath from journalists as the two entered a ballroom of a Singapore luxury hotel.

Xi -- whose Communist regime rules over a vastly larger economy and considers Taiwan a rogue province -- came to a halt first, forcing Ma to take an extra step forward.

The two smiled -- Ma beaming broadly while Xi was more reserved with mouth closed -- and kept their hands locked.

"It felt very good. We both shook hands with a lot of strength," Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou later told a news conference.

As the seconds ticked along, the shake continued as the pair rotated to give different parts of the room a better view.

Earlier there had been chaotic scenes as journalists argued over positioning, some chanting "move back," in unison.

Despite both sticking to a carefully worded policy that there is only "one China", Taiwan and China differ over a range of issues including when the country was founded, and also use different Chinese characters.

- Not quite equal -

The two leaders shook hands before a blank backdrop of yellow apparently to help avoid such sensitivities.

As the cameras whirred and shouts of "give us a wave" rang out, a minute passed, and another 21 seconds before the two finally broke their grip and began to wave side-by-side.

Ma paused to undo his jacket button, giving him a more casual appearance.

"Why did I open my jacket, because otherwise it would get very tight when I raise my hand," he later told reporters.

Despite the elaborate summit choreography, China made clear that it still considers Taiwan as less than equal.

When the two sat down for talks across a table, flanked by other officials, it was Xi who spoke first.

Ma, a democratic politician used to interacting with the public, held his own relaxed press conference afterward.

But Xi, who like all Chinese Communist leaders does not do off-the-cuff encounters, sent a lower-level official to face the media on his behalf.

And while Ma left the hotel from its front entrance, pausing to wave to dozens of gathered reporters, Xi apparently exited in secret.

Chinese state media warned Taiwan against pursuing independence Sunday, a day after a historic meeting between the leaders of the mainland and the island it calls its own.

President Xi Jinping and Ma Ying-jeou's handshake in Singapore was a symbolic step towards closing the rift that has separated Beijing and Taipei since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949.

But the occasion has also highlighted the tensions that remain across the Taiwan strait, where China still has an estimated 1,500 missiles aimed at stopping the island from declaring its independence.

Relations have improved dramatically since Ma's 2008 election, with increases in trade and tourism, as well as the start of direct flights.

But Beijing has grown concerned about the relationship's future as Taiwan's opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), which has long called for a split with the mainland, looks set to win January's presidential election, potentially unseating Ma's friendly Kuomintang party (KMT).

The People's Daily, the official mouthpiece of the ruling Communist Party, warned against "Taiwan independence" in a Sunday morning editorial, saying that Taiwan must respect the "1992 consensus", a tacit agreement which acknowledges there is "one China" but allows each side their own interpretation.

Without adhering to the principle, it said, "the boat of peaceful development may meet with raging waves and stormy seas."

"It might even capsize," it said.

Stern admonitions also appeared in the often fiery Global Times, which has close ties to the communist leadership.

"Taiwan society lacks vigilance, and Taiwan has failed to impose restrictions on its potential destructive force to the island's future", the paper said.

The island, it warned, "must urge candidates that only by adhering to the 1992 Consensus can they fulfil their obligations of guaranteeing a lasting peace for the island's 23 million people, and therefore be qualified as a 'president'."

Ma, too, has warned against the consequences of diverging from the 1992 consensus, which the DPP does not recognise.

DPP presidential candidate Tsai Ing-wen has repeatedly said that she will maintain the status quo if elected president in January, but is likely to face pressure from pro-independent voices within her own party.

Detained Taiwanese activists slam Singapore clampdown
Taipei (AFP) Nov 8, 2015 - Taiwanese activists who say they were were detained by Singapore authorities ahead of the landmark meeting between President Ma Ying-jeou and Chinese leader Xi Jinping slammed their treatment as "unacceptable" Sunday.

Their comments came as protests broke out again overnight in Taipei over the summit, the first time leaders from both sides of the strait have met since their split in 1949, a move seen by Ma's opponents as selling out to China.

Police in Singapore -- a city state where public protests are banned -- said Saturday they were interviewing five Taiwanese nationals amid a security clampdown at the summit venue.

Three members of anti-China political party Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) were taken away from a Singapore hostel for police questioning Saturday morning and were released later that night, a spokesman in Taipei said.

TSU legislative candidate Hsiao Ya-tan was one of those detained, spokesman Liu Ching-wen added, saying they had briefly been able to communicate with her while she was being questioned.

"If they were indeed taken away from the hostel where they were staying, that would be unacceptable," another TSU spokesperson, Chow Mei-li, told AFP.

"How could police arbitrarily enter and take away foreigners when they did nothing that broke their laws?" she added.

It is not clear what the activists were questioned over by Singapore police.

The three are expected to arrive back in Taipei Sunday afternoon.

Separately, three youth activists who had traveled to Singapore on Saturday but had not been allowed through immigration were deported back to Taipei Sunday morning.

They had planned to hand a letter to Taiwan's representative office in Singapore and were out of contact for more than 10 hours, according to Democracy Tautin, one of the social movement groups involved.

"The intentions and actions to peacefully petition are entirely legitimate, reasonable, lawful, and don't infringe on anyone's rights," the group said in a Facebook post.

When asked why they were not allowed through immigration, Singaporean authorities replied: "That's the particular rule for today," according to Democracy Tautin.

Supporters of a pro-unification group chanted slogans while a smaller group of TSU members scuffled briefly with police at Taipei's Taoyuan Airport overnight as Ma arrived home.

Hundreds had gathered in the capital Saturday to condemn the summit.

China-Taiwan relations have warmed under Ma's administration, but he has seen his popular support plummet as the public become increasingly fearful of greater Chinese influence on the democratic island.


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Previous Report
TAIWAN NEWS
Landmark China meet could alienate Taiwanese: analysts
Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 4, 2015
A historic China-Taiwan summit this weekend is likely an attempt to boost Beijing's image ahead of elections on the island, but one that could alienate voters wary of mainland meddling, say analysts. Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping will meet in Singapore on Saturday, in what will be the first face-to-face between leaders since the end of a civil war in ... read more


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