楼主:
JEFF11503 (終極大å¸)
2014-06-27 08:10:371.媒体来源:美联社(外电)
请写出完整媒体来源!例如中国时报、TVBS等,没写者一率删除。
2.完整新闻标题/内文:
a.(该新闻是否超过三天?搜寻一下有没有OP?)
b.(社论特稿都不能贴!违者劣退,贴广告会被劣喔!)
In a first, China sends a minister to Taiwan
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — China has sent its first ever ministerial-level
official to Taiwan for four days of meetings to rebuild ties with the
self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its own.
Protests in Taipei had set back relations earlier this year — and Zhang
Zhijun had to go around scores of anti-China demonstrators to enter a hotel
for the talks — but he said he was very happy to be the first Taiwan Affairs
Office minister to visit the island.
"To reach Taiwan from Beijing I flew three hours, but to take that step took
no less than 65 years," he said in remarks opening the meeting with his
counterpart Wang Yu-chi.
China has described the trip as a chance for Zhang to understand the island
better. Analysts say he will likely keep a low profile as he travels around
Taiwan through Saturday, avoiding strong political statements during
scheduled chats with students, low-income people and a figure in Taiwan's
anti-China chief opposition party.
China and Taiwan have been separately ruled since the Chinese civil war of
the 1940s. China sees the island as part of its territory that eventually
must be reunified — by force if necessary — despite a Taiwanese public
largely wary of the notion of Chinese rule.
In 2008, Beijing set aside its military threats to sign agreements binding its
economy to that of the investment-hungry island.
Dialogue opened that year as Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou agreed to put off
political issues to build trust and improve the island's economy through
tie-ups with China's much larger one.34 The two sides have signed 21 deals,
boosting two-way trade to31 $124.4 billion last year and bringing in 31about 3
million mainland tourists, who were once all but banned.
The easing in tensions across the Taiwan Strait has been welcomed by
Washington, and its top diplomat for East Asia, Daniel Russel, said the U.S.
was watching Zhang's visit with interest.
"We welcome all steps forward on cross-Strait relations that are acceptable
to the people on both sides," Russel told reporters in Washington.
But in March, hundreds of student-led protesters forcibly occupied parliament
in Taipei to try to stop ratification of a two-way service trade
liberalization pact between the mainland and Taiwan. The 24-day action dubbed
the Sunflower Movement spiraled into the thousands, many of whom demanded an
end to Taiwan's engagement with China, which they still see as an enemy.
On Wednesday Zhang compared China-Taiwan relations to taking a boat upstream.
"If it doesn't go forward, it goes backward," he said.
The two men discussed details of establishing first-ever consular-style
offices to help to investors and tourists. They also agreed to renegotiate
minor clauses of the services trade pact after it takes effect.
Despite the protests, Taiwan's parliament is expected to ratify the deal,
although it's not clear when that would happen.
Taiwan says it will make no announcements during the visit, and the main
opposition party says it will not organize protests against Zhang, though
smaller protest groups are vowing to follow him. More than 100 scuffled with
supporters at the airport and clashed with a column of police at the hotel,
leaving one activist injured.
"Amid all these tensions this particular visit obviously is important in
terms of trying to soothe sentiments and trying to stabilize relations," said
Dali Yang, a China expert at the University of Chicago. "Any representative
from the mainland, going to Taiwan, I think the best they can do is to try to
stabilize relations."
But the lack of big protests doesn't mean that more Taiwanese want closer
ties with China, analysts say.
"The best one could say is that a muting of protests would reflect a maturing
of attitudes in Taiwan, and a greater willingness to listen and to express
concerns in a less confrontational way," said Alan Romberg, East Asia Program
director at The Stimson Centre, a Washington-based think tank. "But it would
not mean that those concerns have disappeared."
http://ppt.cc/seEw
4.备注:反正呢,美国人就是这么一回事嘛,一切向自己的利益看
自己爽就好
还有啊,马卡茸,对日本的时候,不是很硬吗!!!
怎么从太阳旗换成五星旗,从东京换成北京,只差一个字内
态度就差这么多,阿是怎样?
弱国无外交吗?
(一个人一天只能张贴一则新闻,"被删"或"自删"也算额度内,超贴者劣文"请注意")
作者: xxKWANxx 2014-06-27 09:53:00
说实在夹在这两国,要国家正常化很难,国民党在利益争取上比民进党强,赚中共的钱跟台湾百姓的钱赚多了,美国又不可能放纵国民党太偏中,又担心台湾独立,赢家就国民党,美国,国民党权贵,台湾人民最可悲。