Yahoo – AFP,
Tom Hancock, 7 Nov 2015
![]() |
Chinese
President Xi Jinping (R) and his counterpart from Taiwan, President Ma
Ying-jeou shake hands during their meeting at Shangrila hotel in Singapore on
November 7, 2015 (AFP Photo/Roslan Rahman)
|
The
presidents of China and Taiwan reached across decades of Cold War-era
estrangement and rivalry Saturday to exchange a historic handshake and warm
words in the first summit since the two sides' traumatic 1949 split.
China's Xi
Jinping and Taiwan's Ma Ying-jeou shook hands for more than a minute and smiled
for a mass of reporters before their talks in Singapore in scenes considered
unthinkable until recently.
They later
sat down across a table from each other, with Xi praising the event as opening
a "historic chapter in our relations" and repeating China's
oft-expressed desire for eventual reunification.
![]() |
Pro-independent
activists from the Taiwan
Solidarity Union hold a portrait of Taiwan
President
Ma Ying-jeou's before tearing it
apart, at the Taoyuan airport on
November 8, 2015 (AFP Photo/Sam Yeh)
|
He added
that "no matter what kind of winds and rains are experienced by
compatriots on the two sides, no matter how long divisions last, there is no
power that can separate us."
Despite the
apparent warmth, the hour-long meeting's lasting significance remains to be
seen.
No agreements
were announced between two sides that still refuse to formally recognise each
other's legitimacy and Ma's moves face significant opposition at home.
But the
encounter is undeniably historic: the previous occasion was in 1945, when
Communist revolutionary leader Mao Zedong met with China's nationalist
president Chiang Kai-shek in a failed reconciliation attempt.
The
eventual Communist takeover forced Chiang's armies and about two million
followers to flee to Taiwan, then a backwater island province, leaving a
national rupture that has preoccupied both sides ever since.
'Mutual
respect'
"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, in the unexpectedly cordial encounter.
Ma later
told reporters he proposed the establishment of a hotline between to the two
sides and that Xi responded positively.
He also
raised issues sensitive to Taiwan's people, including the arsenal of Chinese
missiles aimed at Taiwan, and China's policy of marginalising the island
diplomatically.
"We
hope these things do not continue," said Ma, calling for "mutual
respect."
Xi did not
address reporters, leaving that to a lower-ranking official.
Ma has
expressed hope the meeting could be a step toward normalising cross-strait
relations, but no further plans for closer contact emerged.
Washington
welcomed the meeting and called for "further progress by both sides toward
building ties, reducing tensions, and promoting stability on the basis of
dignity and respect," State Department spokesman John Kirby said.
Analysts
said there is no guarantee any glow will last, especially with Ma out of office
soon, and his ruling party expected to lose in January polls to an opposition
that distrusts China.
"This
meeting will remain a historic moment but everything will depend on the result
of the elections in Taiwan," said Jean-Pierre Cabestan of Hong Kong
Baptist University.
"Xi's
very pro-reunification language... risks alarming more than one person on the
island."
Though
politically divided for decades, business and investment ties have flowered.
Since
taking office in 2008, Ma's Beijing-friendly policies have borne new fruit,
including a boom in Chinese visitors to the island, more than 20 trade
agreements -- and Saturday's summit.
But many in
Taiwan, a rambunctious democracy, are deeply uneasy at drawing too close to the
Communist-ruled mainland orbit, and reunification remains a distant prospect.
"After
watching the Ma-Xi meeting this afternoon on TV, I believe most Taiwanese
people, like me, feel very disappointed," the presidential candidate of
the opposition Democratic People's Party, Tsai Ing-wen, said in a statement.
"We
really regret that the only result from the Ma-Xi meeting is an attempt to put
people's choices on cross-strait relations in a box, using a political
framework on an international stage."
Hundreds of
opponents of the summit massed outside Ma's office in Taipei Saturday,
condemning the meeting and Xi's "family" comments.
Mister,
Mister
Lingering
tensions were in plain view at the summit, where the leaders addressed each
other as "mister" rather than "president" -- which would
have legitimised their governments.
Beijing
sees Taiwan as a wayward province and this disdain surfaced in China's coverage
of the event.
After Xi
finished addressing Ma at the meeting's opening, Chinese state broadcaster CCTV
cut away to a studio discussion as video of Ma speaking rolled, but with no
sound.
Opponents
at home accuse Ma, who leaves office soon, of using the summit to boost his
ruling Kuomintang's (KMT) flagging chances at the polls.
Some
analysts feel China also finally granted the meeting, long sought by Ma, to
help boost the KMT, which Beijing favours over the more independence-minded
opposition.
But they
warn the strategy could backfire with anxious Taiwanese voters if China is seen
meddling in the election.
Out on a limb: countries that have direct diplomatic relations with #Taiwan pic.twitter.com/m2VfULRCTR
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) November 6, 2015




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