Taiwan authorities should "stop playing with fire," a senior
official said Wednesday.
Taipei's radical push towards independence has put cross-Straits
relations in the crucible. Peace and stability across the Taiwan
Straits will be determined by what happens in the next three
months, said Wang Zaixi, vice minister of the Taiwan Affairs Office
of the State Council.
Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian's stepped-up efforts towards
independence pose a great threat, he said.
"Developments on the island ahead of the March election will
have significant impact on the situation and future cross-Straits
ties," Wang said in an exclusive interview with China
Daily.
"They should be closely watched. If Chen will recklessly take
more risky pro-independence moves... it will trigger tension and
even a clash in bilateral ties."
The official stopped short of threatening the use of force.
Instead, he reiterated Beijing's long-standing policy that the
mainland will make unremitting efforts to peacefully settle the
Taiwan question but "will never allow anybody to split Taiwan from
China in any way.''
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has said Beijing will pay any price
to safeguard the unity of the motherland.
While promoting the peaceful reunification of Taiwan and the
mainland, Beijing has not renounced the use of force should Taiwan
declare independence.
Wang's new comments highlighted the growing uncertainty clouding
the Taiwan Straits and the Asia-Pacific region as Chen takes
separatist steps to woo votes in the "presidential" elections on
March 20.
The mood has been simmering since Taiwan passed a controversial
law in November allowing referendums. The move was widely seen as a
scheme to move the island closer to formal independence.
Chen has insisted on holding a so-called "defensive referendum"
on election day despite a blunt warning from US President George W.
Bush against his unilateral move to change the status quo.
Wang called on people on both sides of the Straits and the
international community to see through Chen's two-handed strategy
to push ahead with his attempts to split.
On the one hand, Chen recently repeated a pledge not to promote
any referendum on changing the status quo in regard to independence
to ease misgivings and pressure from the world community.
At the same time, Taipei plans to send delegations to the United
States, Japan and Europe to assure them the proposed "defensive
referendum" will not change the island's status quo with the
mainland.
The Taiwan leader, on the other hand, has showed no signs of
backing down from his referendum plan and has gone as far as to
call a "holy war" against the mainland.
Wang said Chen's two-faced tactics have exposed his true
strategy to win an election by fanning populist winds and
jeopardizing cross-Straits ties.
Chen's explanation has failed to dispel deep worries from the
public and the international community, Wang said.
He said word games couldn't cover up Chen's pro-independence
conspiracy although he has tried to describe the "defensive
referendum" as "peace referendum".
Under the guise of promoting democracy, the referendum plan is
actually Chen's way of provoking the mainland and creating tensions
in cross-Straits relations, he stressed.
The leader apparently aims to upset the cross-Straits status quo
that both Taiwan and the mainland are one by splitting the island
from the Chinese territory in piecemeal fashion, said Wang.
(China Daily January 8, 2004)