BEIJING (AP) — Chinese President Xi Jinping met with former Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou in
Beijing Wednesday in a bid to promote unification between the sides that separated amid civil war in
1949.
Ma left office almost two decades ago and was largely excluded from the opposition Nationalist Party’s
failed campaign to retake the presidency in January, a concession to the electorate’s strong opposition
to political unification with China and politicians seen as willing to compromise Taiwan’s security.
He follows a long line of politicians from the Nationalists, also known as the KMT, who have been invited
to China by its authoritarian one-party government and given VIP treatment on visits around the
country.
China claims Taiwan as its own territory, to be annexed by force if necessary. Beijing sends navy ships
and warplanes around the island on a daily basis in hopes of wearing down Taiwan’s defensives and
intimidating the population.
“The people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are all Chinese. There is no dispute that cannot be
resolved, there is no problem that cannot be discussed, and no force can separate us,” Xi told Ma.
“Differences in systems cannot change the fact that both sides of the Taiwan Straits belong to the same
country and nation,” he added.
Ma responded that a new war between the sides would be “an unbearable burden for the Chinese
nation.”
“The Chinese people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait will definitely have enough wisdom to handle
cross-Strait disputes peacefully and avoid conflicts,” Ma said.
Independence leaning president-elect Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party won the January
election handily and his vice president-elect Bi-khim Hsiao has been visiting nations friendly to Taiwan in
Europe and elsewhere ahead of taking office.
Ma’s 11-day trip, ostensibly at the head of a student delegation, underlines continued interactions in
education, business and culture despite Beijing’s threat to use military force against the self-governing
island democracy to achieve unification.
Toward the end of his second term in 2015, Ma held a historic meeting with Xi in Singapore, which has
close contacts with both sides. The meeting — the first between the leaders of China and Taiwan in
more than half a century — produced few tangible outcomes, and Ma’s Nationalist Party lost the next
presidential election to Tsai Ing-wen of the DPP.
Lai Ching-te, currently vice president, is despised by Beijing for his opposition to unification. The
Nationalists recovered a narrow majority in the legislature but their influence on foreign policy and
other national issues remains limited.
Taiwan has been boosting military relations with allies such as the U.S. and Japan while maintaining
close economic ties with the Chinese mainland. (AP)