Former Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou starts ‘journey of peace’ in mainland China

Former Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou starts ‘journey of peace’ in mainland China
Former Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou starts ‘journey of peace’ in mainland China
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Before he left for Shenzhen on Monday, Ma told reporters at the airport that his trip would be “a journey of peace and a journey of friendship”.

“In the face of the increasingly tense situation in the Taiwan Strait, I hope we can convey the feelings of the Taiwanese people that they love peace, hope for cross-strait exchanges and hope to avoid war,” said Ma, who is leading a group of 20 students on the trip.

Ma said that – as he did last year when he led 50 students on a trip to the mainland – he aimed to promote youth exchanges between the two sides as he believed such interaction could help to “reduce cross-strait hostility and accumulate goodwill”.

The group was met by senior officials from the Taiwan Affairs Office at Shenzhen airport on Monday afternoon. Ma later met TAO chief Song Tao at an evening reception at Wuzhou Guest House, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Song passed on greetings from Xi and said compatriots from the two sides of the Taiwan Strait were all Chinese and should “firmly oppose Taiwan independence separatist activities and external interference”.

“People from across the strait should actively promote exchanges and cooperation in various areas … enhance kinship … and boost peaceful and integrated development of cross-strait relations,” he said, adding the two sides should also strive for “national reunification and rejuvenation”.

Ma thanked Xi for his greetings, and called for more exchanges and cooperation.

Max Lo, executive director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society think tank, said the meeting with Song on the first day of Ma’s trip suggested his visit was being given “more weight” by Beijing than last year, when they met on the fourth day .

Lo said that it was likely because Beijing welcomed Ma could serve as a bridge to ease rising tensions with Taipei.

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Chang Wu-ueh, a professor of China studies at Tamkang University in New Taipei City, said Beijing needed a platform to promote its cross-strait policies.

“But it is a suitable platform after Lien Chan gradually withdraws from the political scene,” he said.

Lien, a former vice-president of Taiwan and former KMT chairman, made a landmark “journey of peace” to the mainland in 2005 that helped form a communication channel between Beijing and the Kuomintang.

“Ma’s visit should be able to help develop peaceful cross-strait relations in a certain way,” Chang said, adding that this was needed for Beijing to pacify the hawkish voices in mainland China.

Xi has said that Beijing’s “reunification” with Taiwan is inevitable, but that the preference was to do so peacefully. However there have been calls among the hawks in mainland China to retake the island by force.

Beijing sees the self-ruled island as part of its territory to be brought under mainland control and it has never renounced the use of force to do so. Most countries, including the United States, do not recognize Taiwan as independent but are opposed to any unilateral change of the cross-strait status quo by force.

Ma Ying-jeou visited the Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum in Nanjing with a delegation from Taiwan in March last year. Photo: Xinhua

Ma’s visit comes at a time of heightened tensions. While Ma had a policy of engagement with the mainland when he was president from 2008 to 2016, relations have soured since Tsai Ing-wen, from the independence-leaning Democratic Progressive Party, took office. Beijing has also been deeply critical of the DPP’s Lai, who won January’s presidential election.

Hostility worsened after the deaths in February of two mainland Chinese fishermen whose boat capsized as they fled the Taiwanese coastguard near the Taiwan-controlled island of Quemoy, or Kinmen.

Beijing accused the Taiwanese coastguard of using “violent and dangerous methods” in their pursuit, while Taipei said they had been enforcing the law by asking the fishermen to stop for an inspection.

Taiwan’s concerns grow over Quemoy waters as Beijing steps up patrols

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