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 China envoy tells Taiwan he sees move toward peace 
Chairman of Taiwan's Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF), Chiang Pin-kung, left, shakes hands with his counterpart Chen Yunlin, chairman of China's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait (ARATS), as he arrives for five days of cross strait negotiations in Taichung, central Taiwan, Monday, Dec. 21, 2009. (AP)

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China envoy tells Taiwan he sees move toward peace

TAICHUNG, Taiwan — China's senior Taiwan envoy told his hosts Monday that Beijing wants to "move down the road of peace," a day after tens of thousands of Taiwanese demonstrators blasted the government for its China-friendly policies.

Chen Yunlin's statement in the central city of Taichung came amid heavy security, with police preventing several hundred protesters from besieging his hotel. The protesters view Chen as the spearhead for Beijing's proclaimed policy of uniting Taiwan with the mainland. The sides split amid civil war in 1949.

Chen arrived in Taichung on Monday to discuss a wide-ranging free-trade agreement with Taiwanese officials, part of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou's push to link the island's economy ever closer to China's.

Four minor economic accords are also on the agenda.

Since assuming office in May 2008, Ma has eased tensions across the 100-mile- (160-kilometer-) wide Taiwan Strait to their lowest level in 60 years, turning his back on predecessor Chen Shui-Bian's pro-independence policies amid a welter of business-boosting initiatives.

They include launching regular air and sea links between the sides and ending across-the-board restrictions on Chinese investment in Taiwan.

Shortly after his arrival, Chen acknowledged the progress the sides had already made, and said he hopes that further gains can be made.

"History has proved and will prove that the two sides of the strait are marching ahead on the right path," he said. "We want to move down the road of peace."

Chen spoke a day after tens of thousands of opposition demonstrators marched through the streets of Taichung to protest Ma's policies.

The main opposition Democratic Progressive Party believes the president's China-friendly push sets the stage for an eventual Chinese takeover of the island — a charge Ma vehemently denies.

The DPP says Ma's intended trade deal — formally known as the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, or ECFA — will flood the island with cheap Chinese products, prompting massive job losses.

"Our president has turned blind to the possibility that jobs will be lost" after signing the ECFA with China, DPP Chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen told protesters.

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Comments
December 21, 2009    alvinchen3333@
In fact, every Taiwan man knows this "policy" is another plot to get Taiwan. Why do tens of thousands demonstrators want to express this "worries" about China- friendly policies? Because Taiwan distrusts to Communist China for long years and time approves Communist truly distrustful.

ECFA can sign but who can supervise Communist China?
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