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Top Stories // Weekend, November 22, 2008 Print Article Email To Friend(s) Feedback Text Larger Text Smaller One Column Two Columns  
China, Taiwan hold historic meeting
Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 22-Nov-2008 10:56 hrs
Taiwan's former Kuomintang Deputy leader Lien Chen (R) and Taiwan's Affairs Office representative Wang Yi arrive for a meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Lima.
 
 
Chinese President Hu Jintao met here with a senior Taiwan envoy in the highest-level meeting to take place overseas between the rivals since their split in 1949.
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Taiwan's former premier Lien Chan, who is honorary chairman of the island's ruling Kuomintang party, met with Hu for about 40 minutes at a hotel in Lima, Peru, where leaders are meeting for an Asia-Pacific summit.
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Officials in Taiwan's summit delegation called it the highest-level meeting in an international setting since 1949, when the Kuomintang fled to Taiwan after losing China's civil war to the communists.
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"It is very significant for old friends to meet far away from Asia," Lien, who has met Hu twice in China this year, told reporters after the meeting.
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China has historically opposed any hint of international recognition of democratic Taiwan, which Beijing considers a part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary.
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Friday's chat at the mainland Chinese delegation's hotel was the latest step forward for the two Cold War rivals, whose relations have improved dramatically this year.
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Taiwan in March elected Beijing-friendly President Ma Ying-jeou, ending two decades of rule in Taipei by leaders who rattled China with their support for a separate identity for the democratic island.
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Ma earlier this month became Taiwan's first president to meet with a senior Chinese official, who signed four deals that will see the two sides cooperating in air travel, post and cargo shipping.
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But the official's visit to Taipei also triggered mass demonstrations by tens of thousands of anti-Beijing protesters.
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Lien said that in the near future, the two sides would try to build on this year's agreements by taking up more complicated issues, including financial and legal concerns.
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"These sort of issues take a longer time to deal with," he said.
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Lien, a strong supporter of reconciliation with Beijing, is representing Taiwan at the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), a 21-member group representing half of global trade.
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Taiwan has traditionally sent business leaders or prominent citizens as representatives to international fora to avoid rankling China. A former premier in the 1990s, Lien is easily the most prominent sent so far.
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Lien said his closed-door talk with Hu touched on regional issues facing the APEC meeting opening on Saturday, offering few details when asked.
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Officials in Beijing's delegation made no immediate comment.
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However, Lien stressed the historic significance of this year's rapprochement between the sides, saying its benefits would extend beyond the borders of either side.
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"This will be beneficial to the peoples of both sides, the Asia-Pacific region and the entire world," Lien said.
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Following Ma's election, top officials from both sides met in Beijing in June for the first direct dialogue between the two parties in 10 years.
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Those talks led to the launch of regular direct flights between China and the island, and measures to boost tourism.
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The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war that saw Mao Zedong's Communists seize power, banishing the Chinese Nationalists to Taiwan.
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A survey of Asian opinion leaders conducted for the APEC summit showed the region's fears of a conflict between China and Taiwan have ebbed dramatically since Ma's election. — AFP

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