President William Lai (賴清德) called China the "real barrier" to cross-strait exchanges and urged Beijing to hold talks with Taipei to ease tourism restrictions during a discussion with media this morning.
"The real barrier to cross-strait exchanges is actually China, not Taiwan," Lai said, referring to Beijing's restrictions on Chinese tourists visiting Taiwan, during a question-and-answer session at the Presidential Office following his New Year's Day address.
Photo: Lo Pei-de, Taipei Times
"If China is genuinely sincere, I suggest that the Taiwan Strait Tourism Association and the Association for Tourism Exchange across the Taiwan Straits begin negotiations [to ease those restrictions," Lai said.
The two associations were established by Taipei and Beijing respectively to facilitate coordination and negotiations between the two sides on tourism.
Lai cited government data as saying that the number of Taiwanese traveling to China for tourism or business reached 2.05 million between January and November last year, while only 285,000 Chinese tourists visited Taiwan during the same period.
The 2.05 million visitors were primarily individual travelers, as Taiwan's government currently does not allow Taiwanese citizens to travel to China in groups.
At the same time, Lai criticized Beijing for prohibiting Chinese students from pursuing degrees in Taiwan and for restricting tourists from visiting Taiwan.
The president made the comments after being asked about a pledge made by a Shanghai official during the Shanghai-Taipei City Forum earlier this month that the Chinese city planned to allow its residents to travel to Taiwan.
Currently, only residents from the Chinese province of Fujian are permitted to travel to Taiwan, but their visits are limited to Kinmen and Lienchiang counties, according to China's regulations.
As cross-strait relations remain strained and Beijing continues to refuse to engage in dialogue with the Democratic Progressive Party government in Taipei, bilateral tourism has taken a hit, with both sides blaming each other for creating obstacles.
During the news conference, which began with Lai's New Year's Day address that barely touched on cross-strait issues, the president also said it was "not worth it" for Taiwanese to apply for a Chinese identification card, which would lead to the revocation of Taiwanese citizenship as per Taiwan's laws.
He was commenting on a video by a Taiwanese YouTuber that claimed that many Taiwanese had been encouraged to apply for Chinese ID cards, with about 100,000 Taiwanese having obtained the document.
The government would work to raise public awareness of the seriousness of the issue to better prevent Taiwanese from being tempted by "short-term gains" and "going down the wrong path," he said.
The Mainland Affairs Council has said it would look into the matter.
AGING: While Japan has 22 submarines, Taiwan only operates four, two of which were commissioned by the US in 1945 and 1946, and transferred to Taiwan in 1973 Taiwan would need at least 12 submarines to reach modern fleet capabilities, CSBC Corp, Taiwan chairman Chen Cheng-hung (陳政宏) said in an interview broadcast on Friday, citing a US assessment. CSBC is testing the nation’s first indigenous defense submarine, the Hai Kun (海鯤, Narwhal), which is scheduled to be delivered to the navy next month or in July. The Hai Kun has completed torpedo-firing tests and is scheduled to undergo overnight sea trials, Chen said on an SET TV military affairs program. Taiwan would require at least 12 submarines to establish a modern submarine force after assessing the nation’s operational environment and defense
A white king snake that frightened passengers and caused a stir on a Taipei MRT train on Friday evening has been claimed by its owner, who would be fined, Taipei Rapid Transit Corp (TRTC) said yesterday. A person on Threads posted that he thought he was lucky to find an empty row of seats on Friday after boarding a train on the Bannan (Blue) Line, only to spot a white snake with black stripes after sitting down. Startled, he jumped up, he wrote, describing the encounter as “terrifying.” “Taipei’s rat control plan: Release snakes on the metro,” one person wrote in reply, referring
The coast guard today said that it had disrupted "illegal" operations by a Chinese research ship in waters close to the nation and driven it away, part of what Taipei sees a provocative pattern of China's stepped up maritime activities. The coast guard said that it on Thursday last week detected the Chinese ship Tongji (同濟號), which was commissioned only last year, 29 nautical miles (54km) southeast of the southern tip of Taiwan, although just outside restricted waters. The ship was observed lowering ropes into the water, suspected to be the deployment of scientific instruments for "illegal" survey operations, and the coast
An inauguration ceremony was held yesterday for the Danjiang Bridge, the world’s longest single-mast asymmetric cable-stayed bridge, ahead of its official opening to traffic on Tuesday, marking a major milestone after nearly three decades of planning and construction. At the ceremony in New Taipei City attended by President William Lai (賴清德), Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), Minister of Transportation and Communications Chen Shih-kai (陳世凱) and New Taipei City Mayor Hou Yu-ih (侯友宜), the bridge was hailed as both an engineering landmark and a long-awaited regional transport link connecting Tamsui (淡水) and Bali (八里)