Sunday, March 23, 2008

Taiwan's Ma win Presidential Election

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -- Taiwan's president-elect said Sunday he had no immediate plans to visit China and would work to fulfill his campaign pledge to improve relations with the communist neighbor, starting direct flights, allowing more Chinese tourists to visit and helping the island's financial industry go to the mainland.
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Taiwan's president-elect Ma Ying-jeou and his wife celebrate his victory in Taipei on Saturday.

Ma Ying-jeou, a former Taipei mayor, trounced his ruling party rival, Frank Hsieh, in Saturday's vote after a long campaign that focused on relations with China. Ma was widely viewed to be favored by Beijing, which insists this self-ruled island of 23 million people is part of the mainland.

A sitting Taiwanese president hasn't set foot on the mainland since a bloody civil war split the two sides in 1949. Ma told reporters on Sunday that he had no plans to visit China in the near future.

"I think the most urgent job for us to do is to solve many of the urgent problems in terms of our relations with mainland China," said Ma of the Nationalist Party. "For instance, direct flights, to allow mainland tourists to come to Taiwan, to allow our financial services industry to go to the mainland."

Although thousands of Taiwanese companies have invested in China in recent years, the island still maintains a ban on direct shipping and air links across the 100-mile (160-kilometer-wide) Taiwan Strait. The government has also been cautious about relaxing restrictions on sensitive or strategic industries -- like finance and technology -- that want a bigger piece of China's booming market.

The main worry is that Taiwan would become too vulnerable or dependent on China, which still threatens to use its massive military to unify the two sides.

Ma, who won 58 percent of the vote, endured an often nasty campaign by Hsieh, a former premier who got 41 percent of the ballots. Hsieh tried to paint Ma as a softy who would quickly cave in to China and sell out Taiwan's interests.

The 57-year-old Ma has proposed a common economic market with China, and Hsieh told voters the policy would trigger an invasion of cheap Chinese laborers who would steal away Taiwanese jobs.


马英九先生,恭贺您的成功,希望在未来的日子里,您能带领台湾进入新时代!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Well written article.