The Chinese Communist Party's top official in Shanghai yesterday invited Taipei's KMT mayor to visit China, in its latest bid to court Taiwan's opposition parties.
Shanghai party chief Huang Ju (
Both men were said to have stressed their opposition to independence for the 23 million people of Taiwan.
PHOTO: REUTERS
The meeting took place a day before Wu was expected to meet China's top envoy on Taiwan affairs, Wang Daohan (
There have also been talks circulating of a follow-up visit by KMT Chairman Lien Chan (
Wu told Huang that in his opinion Taiwan independence did not enjoy popular support.
"The mainstream popular sentiment in Taiwan is not for independence.
"And the mainstream popular sentiment will also not allow pro-independence advocates to get their own way," Wu told Huang at a meeting in Shanghai yesterday, in a comment that was clearly aimed at Taiwan's President Chen Shui-bian (
According to polls taken by Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council, when the KMT was in office, the majority of people in Taiwan support what is called "maintaining the status quo."
This is taken to mean neither moving toward unification nor moving toward independence.
Wu said to Huang: "We are pursuing reunification and we hope to return to the 1992 agreement."
In 1992, China and Taiwan agreed that each side across the Strait could have its own interpretation of what "one China" meant without agreeing on a definition. The agreement -- albeit verbal -- enabled the two sides to hold talks in 1993.
But China's displeasure with former president Lee Teng-hui (
China broke off official contacts in July 1995, when Lee made a private trip to his alma mater in the US, a move Beijing labeled as separatist.
In 1999, when Lee called for political parity by referring to Taiwan's relations with China as "state-to-state" in nature, China once again shut off contacts with Taiwan.
However, Huang told Wu that the Taipei mayor was "welcome to visit at an appropriate time."
Shanghai's vice-mayor Feng Guoqin (
Shanghai and Taipei have discussed forging "brother city" ties. The brother city plan aims to skirt the sister city relations that cities in China have established with foreign countries.
China has refused to deal with Chen, demanding that he first embrace its "one China" principle.
Some in Chen's DPP reject the "one China" principle because they see it as tantamount to surrender to China.
Wu was in China for a meeting of Hakkas, a Chinese ethnic group on what was formally billed an unofficial visit.
But he met Chinese Vice Premier Qian Qichen (
On Saturday, Wu traveled to Nanjing, China's capital under the KMT, and visited a shrine to Sun Yat-sen, who is honored by both Beijing and Taipei as the founder of modern China.
CSBC Corp, Taiwan (台灣國際造船) yesterday released the first video documenting the submerged sea trials of Taiwan’s indigenous defense submarine prototype, the Hai Kun (海鯤), or Narwhal, showing underwater navigation and the launch of countermeasures. The footage shows the vessel’s first dive, steering and control system tests, and the raising and lowering of the periscope and antenna masts. It offered a rare look at the progress in the submarine’s sea acceptance tests. The Hai Kun carried out its first shallow-water diving trial late last month and has since completed four submerged tests, CSBC said. The newly released video compiles images recorded from Jan. 29 to
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) plans to make advanced 3-nanometer chips in Japan, stepping up its semiconductor manufacturing roadmap in the country in a triumph for Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s technology ambitions. TSMC is to adopt cutting-edge technology for its second wafer fab in Kumamoto, company chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家) said yesterday. That is an upgrade from an original blueprint to produce 7-nanometer chips by late next year, people familiar with the matter said. TSMC began mass production at its first plant in Japan’s Kumamoto in late 2024. Its second fab, which is still under construction, was originally focused on
DETERRENCE EFFORTS: Washington and partners hope demonstrations of force would convince Beijing that military action against Taiwan would carry high costs The US is considering using HMAS Stirling in Western Australia as a forward base to strengthen its naval posture in a potential conflict with China, particularly over Taiwan, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday. As part of its Indo-Pacific strategy, Washington plans to deploy up to four nuclear-powered submarines at Stirling starting in 2027, providing a base near potential hot spots such as Taiwan and the South China Sea. The move also aims to enhance military integration with Pacific allies under the Australia-UK-US trilateral security partnership, the report said. Currently, US submarines operate from Guam, but the island could
The partisan standoff over President William Lai’s (賴清德) proposed defense budget has raised questions about the nation’s ability to adequately fund its own defense, the US Congressional Research Service (CRS) said in a report released on Tuesday. The report, titled Taiwan: Defense and Military Issues, said the government has increased its defense budget at an average annual rate of 5 percent from 2019 to 2023, with about 2.5 percent of its GDP spent on defense in 2024. Lai in November last year proposed a special budget of about US$40 billion over eight years, and said he intends to increase defense spending to