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Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Friday, November 22, 2002

Taiwan Authorities' Refusal Dashes Direct Charter Hopes

Taipei's lack of sincerity and insistence at clinging to a political ideology, could dash the hope of setting up direct charter flights across the Taiwan Straits in time for next year's Spring Festival holidays, said a senior government source.


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Taipei's lack of sincerity and insistence at clinging to a political ideology, could dash the hope of setting up direct charter flights across the Taiwan Straits in time for next year's Spring Festival holidays, said a senior government source.

The source with the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC) said Taiwan's rejection last week of the call for direct flights to and from the mainland has cast a shadow over the plan's future development.

"We have to say that the possibility of introducing direct charter flights between the two sides has been dwindling due to Taiwan authorities' unilateralism and their hesitation to take any practical moves,'' said the source.

"The future development of the matter hinges on Taipei's sincerity rather than empty talks for the benefit of Taiwan compatriots, because time is running out.''

He went on to suggest that Beijing does not concur with Taipei's latest proposal for indirect charter flights run solely by Taiwanese airlines.

Last Tuesday, Taipei turned down the call from local "lawmakers'' for direct charter flights to the mainland in the Chinese lunar New Year period, which falls around February 1 next year.

Opposition Kuomintang "legislator'' John Chang had led the campaign to establish direct charter flights as part of a concerted effort to urge Taipei to lift its decades-old ban on the three direct links -- trade, transport and mail services -- across the Taiwan Straits.

The existing ban on direct transport links between Taiwan and the mainland means both cargo and passengers have to travel via a third location, usually Hong Kong or Macao, which is not only inconvenient, but a waste of money and time.

Chang, the grandson of Chiang Kai-shek, proposed a total of 120 charter flights between Taipei and Shanghai during the traditional family reunion holiday to benefit the hundreds of thousands of Taiwanese people living on the mainland.

But the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), the island's top decision-making body on cross-Straits policy, rejected the proposal, which had received considerable support from both the local business community and "lawmakers,'' citing security concerns.

Instead, the MAC suggested it might allow Taiwanese airlines to operate indirect charter flights via Hong Kong or Macao to bring Taiwanese businessmen and their families home, an operating right currently only applied to Taiwanese airlines.

The CAAC source said Taipei's attitude towards the direct charter flight proposal serves as an apparent sign that the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) administration led by Chen Shui-bian is insincere about implementing direct cross-Straits links.

"Firstly, what the MAC has proposed is not real direct charter flights across the Taiwan Straits, as most people had expected,'' the source said.

"Second, the MAC has failed to deal with the matter in line with the principles of equity and mutual benefit, since it has completely excluded mainland airlines from operating these flights.''

He reiterated Beijing's stated position that the cross-Straits charter flights should be "direct, bilateral and reciprocal.''

"And,'' stressed the source, "mainland airlines should also have the right to participate in the charter-flight business in line with the principle.''


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