China and Taiwan agree to strengthen business relations

Beijing – Negotiators from Taiwan and China signed a series of agreements Sunday to increase cooperation and investment across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan’s chief negotiator Chiang Pin-kung, chairman of the Straits Exchange Foundation, met Chen Yunlin from the mainland Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits in the southern city of Nanjing.

Taiwan agreed to clear the way for Chinese companies to do business on the island, the state-run news agency Xinhua reported.

“Taiwan sincerely welcomes mainland companies to invest on the island,” according to a foundation statement quoted in the report.

“The goal of economic normalization between the two sides is being realized,” Wang Yi, director of China’s State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, was quoted as saying.

The negotiators, meeting for the third time since China and Taiwan resumed talks last year, also signed three separate agreements.

The first would increase the frequency and routes of cross-strait direct flights, Xinhua reported.

There would now be a total of 270 flights per week, up from 108, and new routes from Guangzhou and Shanghai to Taipei, as well as from Hefei, Harbin, Nanchang, Guiyang, Ningbo and Jinan.

In the second agreement, the two sides reportedly pledged to work together to fight cross border crimes including drugs and human trafficking, and economic crimes involving fraud, money laundering, forging or falsifying currencies and securities.

According to Xinhua, negotiators from both sides will also now consider cases where there are discrepancies between Chinese and Taiwanese laws.

Chen and Chiang also signed an agreement for a cooperative financial regulatory mechanism aimed at overseeing banking, securities, futures and insurance sectors across the Strait.

Under this agreement, financial organizations would be allowed to do business across the straits, and a currency-clearing system will gradually be set up, the report said.

The latest agreements build on six previous joint actions since last June which first saw the establishment of weekend charter flights, and the expansion of cross-strait postal and shipping. (dpa)

China, Taiwan to discuss cross-Straits relations

Beijing, Apr. 15 (ANI): In a bid to improve cross-Straits relations, China’s mainland negotiator Chen Yunlin and his Taiwan counterpart Chiang Pin-kung are planning to hold a new round of talks in April or May.

“The talks between the mainland’s Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) and the Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) will focus on joint efforts to crack down on crime, regular cross-Straits flights, financial cooperation and judiciary assistance,” State Council Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman Li Weiyi said at a press conference. he two sides are also expected to discuss mainland investment in the island. Progress has already been made through exchanges of experts from both organizations,” the China Daily quoted Li, as saying.

Li Weiyi added that Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao would meet a delegation from the Taiwan-based Cross-Straits Common Market Foundation during the upcoming Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2009.

Head of the Taiwan Work Office of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee Wang Yi, would also meet Taiwan delegates at a round-table discussion on cross-Straits financial cooperation on the sidelines of the forum.

The ARATS and SEF are authorized by the mainland and Taiwan to handle cross-Strait exchanges. Negotiations had been suspended for almost 10 years until June 2008 when Chen and Chiang held their first meeting in Beijing.

The forthcoming meeting will be the third round of talks held between the ARATS and the SEF. (ANI)