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    Presidential election 2008: 19 days to go: Hsieh touts `Taiwan first' trade policy

    NO SACRIFICE: The DPP candidate said he would never allow people to 'hollow out' the nation by leaving debts behind while investing in companies based in China
    By Ko Shu-ling
    STAFF REPORTER
    Monday, Mar 03, 2008, Page 3

    Democratic Progressive Party presidential candidate Frank Hsieh, second left, chats with his running mate Su Tseng-chang, while his wife, Yu Fang-chih, right, talks with Su's wife Chan Hsiu-ling during a break at a campaign rally in Taichung City yesterday.
    PHOTO: CHAN CHAO-YANG, TAIPEI TIMES
    Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) presidential candidate Frank Hsieh (謝長廷) said yesterday that his cross-strait economic policy was meant to uphold sovereignty and national interests while facilitating cross-strait trade.

    Hsieh said he was in favor of further opening up cross-strait trade, but added that the nation's security, dignity and national interests should never be sacrificed.

    "Europeans held a referendum to decide whether they wanted a common market," he said. "No matter where you were born, Hong Kong or Taiwan, and now matter how long you have lived in Taiwan, you [the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT)] don't have the right to push the `cross-strait common market' without the consent of the people."

    Hsieh made the remarks while addressing a campaign rally organized by four social groups -- the Rotary Club, the Lions Club, the Junior Chamber and Kiwani Taiwan -- in Taichung County yesterday morning.

    Hsieh said he would never allow local businesses to hollow out Taiwan by leaving debts behind while investing in China. While direct transportation links are desirable, they must be in the form of charter flight services, Hsieh said.

    Charter flight services can be offered during the Lunar New Year, on weekends, in the morning and at night, but they cannot be defined as domestic routes or as part of a policy that defines Taiwan as part of the People's Republic of China, he said.

    While KMT presidential candidate Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) has pledged to complete the negotiation on charter flights and regular direct flight services within a year should he become president, Hsieh said he would like to know whether Ma would agree to Beijing's designation of the routes as domestic.

    At a separate event in Taichung yesterday afternoon, Hsieh said he opposed the KMT's proposed "cross-strait common market," which he said went against global trends.

    Once such a policy is in place, Hsieh said unemployment would rise while social security would suffer. He proposed to maintain the ban on the import of Chinese laborers, strengthen the crackdown on smuggling from China and bolster inspection mechanisms for food and products imported from China.

    If elected, Hsieh said that he promised to be "a protector of Taiwan" and put the interests of the nation and its people above everything else.

    "I am the captain of the ship," he said. "I am safe and have a future only if this country is safe and has a future."

    A national leader cannot change the course set by his predecessors and derail their project, Hsieh said, adding that Ma was forcing the nation toward annexation by China.

    At another event in Kaohsiung yesterday, Ma running mate Vincent Siew (蕭萬長) called Hsieh's attack on the "cross-strait common market" proposed by him in 2000 a "dirty trick."

    Siew accused Hsieh of "twisting" the meaning of the "cross-strait common market" policy by describing it as a "one China" market.

    He again vowed not to relax the limits on Chinese agricultural imports if the KMT won the presidency.

    He said the KMT would not allow laborers or smuggling from China.

    ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY FLORA WANG
    This story has been viewed 1432 times.

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