Mainland Affairs Council Chairman Joseph Wu (吳釗燮) said yesterday that despite intelligence sources saying that it's unlikely the US will negotiate a "fourth communique" with China during this week's meeting between US President George W. Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤), the government is concerned Bush might censure Taiwan in the meeting.
"The information we have is that there will be no `fourth communique' and there will be no adverse comments about Taiwan. But there has been lots of speculation from the media. So we'll pay extra attention to prevent anything that would undermine Taiwan's interests," Wu said.
"The United States should listen to the voice of Taiwan's people and treat democratic Taiwan fairly," he said.
"If the United States ... makes comments that hurt a democratic country or criticize its elected leader, it will lead the international community to question the consistency of its policy," he said.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has set up a high-level task force to monitor Hu's visit around the clock, officials said.
According to an Associated Press report, China said yesterday that Taiwan will be one of the main topics during Hu's visit.
The AP quoted Qin Gang (秦剛), a spokesman for the Beijing's Foreign Ministry, as saying China hoped the US ``can honor its commitment made on many occasions to the `one China' policy, the three China-US joint communiques and its opposition to Taiwan independence.''
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