Chen avoids showdown with China
Chen avoids showdown with China
Agencies
Taipei/Jakarta/Beijing
Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian ruled out any immediate steps
toward independence as he began a fresh four-year term, calling
for better ties with China in remarks aimed at placating his
giant communist neighbor and key ally the United States.
Chen, 53, vowed in his inauguration speech to press ahead with
contentious plans to adopt a new constitution in 2008, which
Beijing views as tantamount to a declaration of independence. But
the feisty Chen said the charter aimed to promote democracy and
government efficiency.
"I am fully aware that consensus has yet to be reached on
issues related to national sovereignty, territory and the subject
of unification/independence," he said after he took the oath of
office under a steady drizzle at the presidential palace.
"Let me explicitly propose that these particular issues be
excluded from the present constitutional re-engineering project,"
said Chen, who survived a mysterious election eve assassination
attempt to win re-election by a razor-thin margin in March.
Meanwhile, representatives from the Taipei Economic and Trade
Office in Indonesia held on Wednesday a reception to mark Chen's
inauguration.
Following weeks of political turmoil over Taiwan's disputed
elections, China warned Chen on Monday to pull back from a
"dangerous lurch toward independence" or be crushed "firmly and
thoroughly at any cost".
Since their split at the end of a civil war in 1949, Beijing
has viewed Taiwan as a breakaway province that must be returned
to the fold.
China has deployed hundreds of missiles pointed at Taiwan and
has been building up naval power to back its invasion threats.
A conflict in the Taiwan Strait would quickly draw in Taiwan's
chief ally, the United States, and cause market and geopolitical
instability in the region.
Chen said the island was open to any form of future ties with
China and did not reiterate his previous stand that Taiwan is an
independent, sovereign nation or that the island and the mainland
were "one country on each side".
"Leaders of both sides of the Taiwan Strait should have a new
way of thinking to resolve future problems," he told a crowd of
200,000 people. "We would not exclude any possibility, so long as
there is the consent of the 23 million people of Taiwan."
Chen said Chinese military threats would only alienate the
island's people and called for dialogue to boost trade links and
ensure the island's political status quo would not be
unilaterally altered.
He stressed the need for Taiwan to beef up its self-defense
capabilities.
"President Chen has gone as far as he could to extend his
goodwill in his speech," said Andy Chang, a China watcher at the
private Tamkang University.
"Beijing will not find any excuse to escalate tension, at
least for now. But Beijing will remain suspicious of Chen and
will continue to watch if his words match his deeds," Chang said.
The stock market was mildly disappointed that Chen did not
offer new initiatives to improve ties. The main index fell 0.77
percent, in line with a regional trend.
Washington, which switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei
to Beijing in 1979, has called for dialogue and warned against
any unilateral change in Taiwan's political status.
Meanwhile, China on Thursday branded Chen's policies the
"greatest threat to peace and stability" in the region only hours
after he was inaugurated for another four years.
"Chen Shui-bian's provocative pro-independence activities form
the biggest current threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan
Straits," the foreign ministry said in a statement faxed to AFP.
The comments came after Chen was sworn in for a second term as
Taiwan's leader.
"We stick to the basic policy of 'peaceful reunification' and
'one country, two systems,' and are willing to strive for a
peaceful solution of the Taiwan issue with the greatest sincerity
and effort," the statement said.
"But we will absolutely not tolerate Taiwan independence. That
position is firm and unshakable," it said.
"One country, two systems" is the formula adopted for Hong
Kong since its return to Chinese rule in 1997, but was originally
coined by Beijing as a model for reunification with Taiwan.
China also took a swipe at the United States, after Washington
said Beijing's harsh language on Taiwan has "no place in
international civilized discourse."
"The United States should not send the wrong signals to
'Taiwan independence forces,'" it said.
Lien Chan, chairman of Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist
Party, who was routed by Chen in the presidential elections, has
refused to concede defeat.
Lien has said the election eve shooting that lightly wounded
Chen and his vice president may have been staged to win sympathy
votes and filed two lawsuits to overturn Chen's victory and seek
a new election.
"It's an illegitimate gathering," Lien told about 10,000
protesters, referring to Chen's inauguration.