Taiwan snubs China premiers warning against independence
TAIPEI - Taiwanese authorities on Sunday rebuffed Chinese Premier Wen Jiabaos warning against the islands independence movement saying Taiwans future should be decided by the people here rather than Beijing. It was nothing new at all. We are not surprised, Huang Wei-feng, deputy chief of Taiwans China policy decision-making body Mainland Affairs Council, told reporters when asked to comment on Wens remarks.
They have been doing this all the way. Didnt they say they have hinged their hope on Taiwan people? But as a matter of fact, they have no idea what Taiwan people are thinking and what they want, Huang said.
But since they're Communists, they really don't care what the Taiwanese think. | Wen issued the warning while addressing the opening of the National Peoples Congress annual session at Beijing, pledging that we will uncompromisingly oppose secessionist activities aimed at Taiwan independence.
Tensions spiked last week after Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian, defying pressure from Washington and Beijing, formally scrapped an advisory council and guidelines set up to look at eventual reunification with the mainland. The council was considered largely symbolic and had been dormant since 2000 but Chens decision infuriated Beijing, which accused Chen of pushing the region towards disaster.
The Taiwanese government has defended the scrapping of the advisory council and guidelines insisting that they were not decided by the people but by the former Kuomintang (KMT, or Nationalist) government in 1990. Taiwan is already a democratic society. Its natural in such society to have various opinions on the issues, Huang said. Against the backdrop, Taiwans future should be decided by the 23 million Taiwan people, he said.
Posted by: Steve White 2006-03-06 |