Taiwan, China set to begin direct daily flights
Direct daily flights between China and Taiwan begin on Monday, the latest step in rapidly improving relations between the island and the mainland.
"That will mark the beginning of more frequent civil exchanges and business as the cost of transportation between the two sides will be lowered and travelling time cut," said Lo Chih-cheng of Taiwan's Soochow University.
"Hostilities between the two sides will also be tempered," he said.
China sees Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to invade if the island, which split from the mainland after a civil war in 1949, ever declares formal independence.
The pro-independence rhetoric of former president Chen Shui-bian angered both China and the United States, Taiwan's leading arms supplier. But Chen has now been indicted for corruption, and Ma's pro-China policies are in place.
The latest step comes Monday, when direct flights -- available only at weekends the past few months -- become daily. Ships going from one to the other will no longer have to go through a third party's territorial waters.
"Once closer links are in place, they could hardly be stopped or retracted, no matter who becomes the next president," Lo said. "And once that happens, Taiwan will not be able to get out of framework of 'One China.'"
The "One China" policy regards Taiwan as part of China. It is Beijing's official policy, and Chinese authorities regularly complain when Taiwan's leaders make visits to other counrtries.
The warming ties with the mainland, however, are not without controversy in place where anti-China sentiment is still strong among many. When Chinese envoy Chen Yunlin visited Taiwan last month to sign the new transport link agreements, massive protests dogged his trip at every turn. Violent clashes between police and protesters injured more than 110 people.
Talks on direct flights had been stymied under the former pro-independence government. Lo rejects the government's claims that Taiwan has more to gain economically from the flights and says that Beijing will benefit more. "While the flights take more Taiwan tourists and investors to China, the number of Chinese tourists travelling to Taiwan is much lower than the targeted 3,000 per day," he said.
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