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Posts Tagged ‘Mr Ma’

The week ahead

A trade pact will draw China and Taiwan closer togther

• IMPROVING relations between China and Taiwan will get another boost with the signing of a groundbreaking free-trade pact by the end of June. Ma Ying-jeou, Taiwan’s president, was elected in 2008 on a platform that called for better ties with China. A free-trade pact with the mainland is the cornerstone of his cross-strait policies. Taiwan, already isolated diplomatically, feared commercial marginalisation when the effects of a free-trade agreement between China and the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) begins to be felt later this year. Mr Ma has already overseen the establishment of direct flights and shipping routes across the 110-mile-wide Taiwan Strait.

•AMERICA’S Supreme Court is likely to hand down a decision involving the Sarbanes-Oxley act of 2002 on Monday June 28th. The legislation, intended to tighten the auditing of public companies in the wake of the accounting scandals at Enron, WorldCom and Tyco, has been widely criticised for imposing costly and burdensome regulations on American businesses. The court will rule on the constitutionality of the board created to oversee independent audits of big companies. But firms may fear that if Sarbanes-Oxley is overturned a Congress on the brink of introducing tough regulation of Wall Street’s financial firms might well replace the act with something even tougher. …

Dalai Lama holds Taiwan prayers

Believers of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, attend a ceremony to pray for survivors and victims of Typhoon Morakot, 1 Sept 2009

The Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, has held a prayer ceremony in southern Taiwan in memory of the victims of last month’s typhoon.

It was the Dalai Lama’s first major public appearance since he arrived on the island on Sunday.

He has described his trip as non-political, but China has condemned it.

It has reportedly postponed several delegations to Taiwan, at a time when relations between Beijing and Taipei have otherwise been improving.

China considers the Dalai Lama a dangerous separatist who is seeking Tibetan independence, and often criticises his official foreign visits.

The trip to Taiwan is especially sensitive given that Beijing considers Taiwan – along with Tibet – as part of Chinese territory.

Remembering the dead

About 20,000 people assembled in the arena in the southern city of Kaohsiung on Tuesday to see the Dalai Lama.

Many of the people there were Tibetan Buddhists from all over Taiwan, but a lot were also typhoon victims, according to the BBC’s correspondent in the country, Cindy Sui.

Military soldiers helping to clean the streets of Linbian, in southern Taiwan

The 74-year-old monk said he shared the sorrow of those who lost their loved ones during Typhoon Morakot, which hit Taiwan on 7 August and left more than 600 people dead or missing.

The people prayed and chanted with the Dalai Lama in unison. At one point he even cracked a joke, saying: "I’m chanting in Tibetan and you’ll be chanting in Mandarin, but it’s going to sound like chaos."

According to our correspondent, nobody in the Kaohsiung arena was thinking about politics – they were simply very eager to get the spiritual message the Dalai Lama wanted to give them.

But the trip is undoubtedly causing strain on Beijing-Taipei relations.

On Sunday a statement from China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said the Dalai Lama’s visit was "bound to have a negative influence on the relations between the mainland and Taiwan".

Chen Shu-rong, spokeswoman for Taiwan’s ruling Kuomintang (KMT) party, told reporters that a senior Communist Party official had already cancelled a visit to Taipei, and a Chinese delegation would not take part in Saturday’s opening of the Deaf Olympics.

Ms Chen told the Associated Press that while she could not confirm that that these actions were taken directly because of the Dalai Lama’s visit, "we do not exclude the possibility".

Little choice

Apart from the Dalai Lama’s visit, Taiwan’s KMT Party has actually been strengthening its ties with China in recent months.

The Chinese government considers President Ma Ying-jeou’s administration far easier to deal with than the island’s previous pro-independence leadership.

But according to our correspondent, Mr Ma had little choice when the opposition party requested an invitation to the Dalai Lama to pray for typhoon victims.

His government had been accused of offering a slow and inefficient response to the typhoon, and our correspondent says he could not afford to hurt his and his party’s image any further.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

President Ma’s imperfect storm

A planned visit by the Dalai Lama to Taiwan upsets China

IF THERE has been one dominant theme of Ma Ying-jeou’s 15-month tenure as president of Taiwan, it is the effort to improve relations with China. And it has borne fruit. Commercial, financial and travel ties are perhaps better than they have ever been since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949 left Taiwan as, de facto, an independent country.

After eight years of worsening relations under President Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), now the main opposition, even a Taiwan-China summit has become conceivable. Now that Mr Ma is also chairman of the ruling Nationalist party, the Kuomintang, or KMT, such a meeting could be held with Hu Jintao not as China’s president, but as the head of its Communist Party. …

Taiwan leader in typhoon apology

Relatives of the victims ofTyphoon Morakot grieve

President Ma Ying-jeou of Taiwan has apologised for the slow official response to Typhoon Morakot.

"We could have done better and we could have been faster," he told reporters one week after the typhoon struck.

Hundreds of people are still trapped by mudslides and floods. Thousands of troops have been sent to help rescue them and provide shelter.

The official death toll has is now above 120. Mr Ma said earlier in the week that it could exceed 500.

See map of affected area

‘Very sorry’

"We could have done better and we could have been faster. But we weren’t better and we weren’t faster," President Ma told reporters in Nantou county, one of the areas hit by the typhoon, the AFP news agency reports.

In pictures: Taiwan devastation

‘Devil’ typhoon’s impact

Soldiers carry supplies for typhoon victims

"Of course we are very sorry."

Troops have been struggling across shattered roads and collapsed bridges to reach stranded communities.

Critics say the authorities were too slow to realise the magnitude of the emergency, while some of those stranded have said they have received no help for days and have been short of food and water.

Many have been waiting for days at the rescue operation centre in Qishan for news of relatives missing since the typhoon struck.

Officials says rescue teams have been hampered by sustained rains in the centre and south of the island and a badly damaged road network which means many villages can only be accessed by air.

Many of the worst-affected villages are inhabited by aborigines, who farm the mountainous terrain.

Thousands more people are believed to be stranded in remote settlements elsewhere in southern and central Taiwan.

The government has requested from foreign countries prefabricated buildings to help house those left homeless by the flooding and supplies of disinfectant, to try to prevent the spread of disease.

In China, which claims sovereignty over Taiwan, companies and charities have raised more than 100m yuan ($14.6m) in donations, the official Xinhua news agency has reported.

TAIWAN’S WORST-AFFECTED AREAS

  • Qishan - rescue operation centre established here, thousands of troops drafted in to help.
  • Liukuei - 200 people awaiting rescue from hot spring resort as of Thursday, with another 700 survivors in the area.
  • Hsinfa - 32 people reported dead, survivors pulled to safety using ropes thrown across river.
  • Hsiaolin – hundreds feared dead following mudslides the morning after Taiwan’s Father’s Day.
  • Taoyuan - residents told to run to higher ground as embankment holding back lake gave way.

Map of area of Taiwan

Click here to return


Are you in the region Have you been affected by the typhoons and the landslides Send us your comments and experiences using the form below.

Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Hopes fade for Taiwan survivors

Hopes are fading that rescuers will be able to save hundreds of people trapped by mudslides and floods in Taiwan, six days after Typhoon Morakot struck.

Thousands of troops are struggling across shattered roads and collapsed bridges to reach stranded communities.

The official death toll has risen to 120, but President Ma Ying-jeou earlier said the final figure could exceed 500.

Mr Ma’s government has been criticised by some for its allegedly slow and inadequate response to the disaster.

Critics say the authorities were too slow to realise the magnitude of the emergency, while some of those stranded say they have received no help for days and are short of food and water.

Many have been waiting for days at the rescue operation centre in Qishan for news of relatives missing since the typhoon struck.

"There are younger people who are arranging rescue missions of their own, because people have received cell-phone text messages from their family members in Taiwan saying they are short of supplies, they are stranded, they don’t have anything to eat," one rescue worker in Kaohsiung, Benson, told the BBC.

Officials says rescue teams have been hampered by sustained rains in the centre and south of the island, and a badly damaged road network which means many villages can only be accessed by air.

See map of affected area

"The government will overcome all obstacles to accomplish the mission," President Ma said.

Memorial park

After days of sending helicopters to evacuate survivors and distribute aid in the south-western village of Hsiaolin, which was buried by a mudslide, rescuers managed to reach it by road on Thursday.

AT THE SCENE
Cindy Sui
BBC News, Hsiaolin

Having seen Hsiaolin with my own eyes, I finally understand the magnitude of what happened. It looks like a river bed with nothing on it – the houses are all gone and a 17m bridge that was there can’t be seen any more.

Nearly 400 people are buried under a 20-30m deep avalanche of mud.

The authorities don’t know where to begin – if they start digging through the mud, it’s not stable ground so it could cost lives.

The mud is so deep that even if the rescue crews had been here in time, they wouldn’t have been able to dig through.

Cindy Sui

However, they had given up hope of finding the 380 people missing under the tons of earth covering the area, Kaohsiung county chief Yang Chiu-hsing said.

Instead of trying to excavate the approximately 170 homes in an effort to find the bodies of their occupants, a memorial park would be built on the site, he added.

Thirty-two people are also missing in the nearby village of Liukuei, which was also hit by a mudslide. Six others were killed in the village of Sinfa when a torrent of water cascaded down a mountainside and destroyed their houses.

Over the past few days, 15,400 people have been ferried to safety from the area, including some 2,000 on Thursday alone.

The BBC’s Cindy Sui, in Kaohsiung county, says the authorities are confident they can bring out the remaining 1,900 people thought to be stranded there on Friday.

The military has enough helicopters now, our correspondent says, and the weather has improved. Troops are being sent on foot into some steep valleys that are hard to search from the air, she adds.

Many of the worst-affected villages are inhabited by aborigines, who farm the mountainous terrain.

Thousands more people are believed to be stranded in remote settlements elsewhere in southern and central Taiwan.

Officials in the island’s south-eastern Taitung county estimated that nearly 3,700 people remained cut off as of Friday morning, the AFP news agency reported, while in central Chiayi county some 9,000 were thought to be stranded.

Reconstruction work

Speaking earlier on Friday, President Ma said that if the 380 people feared buried in Hsiaolin had perished, the nationwide death toll would rise to more than 500.

In pictures: Taiwan devastation

‘Devil’ typhoon’s impact

A woman cries Qishan rescue centre (14 August 2009)

He told a national security meeting that the typhoon had destroyed the homes of 7,000 people and caused agricultural and property damage in excess of $1.5bn (£900m). Reconstruction was expected to cost $3.4bn (£2.05bn), officials said.

Thirty-four bridges and 253 segments of road were destroyed, the ministry of transport said, adding that repairs were expected to take up to three years.

Mr Ma said it was the most severe damage to the island in more than 50 years. An earthquake in 1999 killed 2,400 people.

"While the rescue operation is still going on, we have started rehabilitation and reconstruction work, which is just as pressing as relief efforts but might be even more difficult and cumbersome," he said.

The government has requested from foreign countries prefabricated buildings to help house those left homeless by the flooding and supplies of disinfectant, to try to prevent the spread of disease.

In China, which claims sovereignty over Taiwan, companies and charities have raised more than 100m yuan ($14.6m) in donations, the official Xinhua news agency has reported.

TAIWAN’S WORST-AFFECTED AREAS

  • Qishan - rescue operation centre established here, thousands of troops drafted in to help.
  • Liukuei - 200 people awaiting rescue from hot spring resort as of Thursday, with another 700 survivors in the area.
  • Hsinfa - 32 people reported dead, survivors pulled to safety using ropes thrown across river.
  • Hsiaolin – hundreds feared dead following mudslides the morning after Taiwan’s Father’s Day.
  • Taoyuan - residents told to run to higher ground as embankment holding back lake gave way.

Map of area of Taiwan

Click here to return


Are you in the region Have you been affected by the typhoons and the landslides Send us your comments and experiences using the form below.

Send your pictures to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to +44 7725 100 100. If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

At no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

China and Taiwan presidents swap telegrams

Hu Jintao and Ma Ying-jeou talk of peace in a sign of improved relations that could lead to historic summit

First came direct flights, then freight links, and now a single telegram. The presidents of Taiwan and China exchanged direct messages today for the first time in 60 years, in the latest sign of their thawing relations.

Hu Jintao wrote to Taiwan’s Ma Ying-jeou to mark the latter’s election as chairman of the Nationalist party.

Bacuse of the enduring mutual sensitivities, the message was sent simply to Mr Ma, while Ma’s reply was addressed to Hu as general secretary of the Communist party.

Beijing still claims sovereignty over Taiwan, which has been self-ruled since Chiang Kai-shek fled there following his defeat in the civil war in 1949. China has warned it could use force if Taipei pursued formal independence.

“I hope our two parties can continue to promote peaceful cross-strait development, deepen mutual trust, bring good news to compatriots on both sides and create a revival of the great Chinese race,” said Hu in his telegram.

“We should continue efforts to consolidate peace in the Taiwan Strait and rebuild regional stability,” Ma replied, adding that they should “put aside disputes”.

Ma was elected president in spring last year on a platform of improving relations with China and because of widespread dissatisfaction with the ruling Democratic People’s party.

But while he has signed landmark trade deals, he has avoided political issues, due in large part to powerful anti-Beijing sentiment on the island.

Lin Chong-pin, a strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taipei, told Reuters that the telegram suggested the Chinese leader wants to meet Ma eventually. “It’s sort of expected … It is in Hu Jintao’s benefit or advantage to meet,” Lin said. “It would be a personal feat.”

But analysts believe both sides may take years to weigh up the risks before proceeding.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Taiwan, China Exchange 1st Direct Messages

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The presidents of Taiwan and China exchanged direct messages Monday for the first time since the two sides split 60 years ago – the latest sign of their warming relations.

According to a Nationalist Party statemen…

Taiwan president wins party vote

By Cindy Sui
BBC News, Taipei

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou 26.7.09

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou has been elected head of the island’s ruling party, the Kuomintang, in a vote by party members.

The move will make it easier for him to pass policies through parliament and to have more say in relations with China.

China considers Taiwan as one of its provinces, not a country, and does not recognise Mr Ma as Taiwan president.

But as chairman of the ruling party, Mr Ma will now be able to meet Chinese President Hu Jintao.

Until now, negotiations between the two sides have been conducted largely between the Kuomintang (KMT) and China’s Communist Party, rather than between the two governments.

The past year has seen relations between the two countries improve dramatically, but a summit between the two presidents still may not be likely in the near future.

Local media has anticipated a summit between the two men, which would be the first between Taiwan and China since they separated in 1949 following a civil war.

But analysts say Mr Ma doesn’t want such a meeting to happen soon.

Sensitive issue

Meeting Mr Hu now would be too sensitive, as Mr Ma’s plans to bring the two sides economically closer – including the signing of a type of free-trade agreement – face opposition from those who fear he will sell out to China.

Mr Ma has indicated he is in no hurry to visit China.

Analysts say the main reason he sought the party chairmanship is to exert control over his party, which controls the legislature, so he can get his bills and appointments approved.

Being party chairman, however, will also give him more say over dealings with China.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.