Tsai slams Ma¡¦s
¡¥simplistic¡¦ proposal
By Chris Wang and Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff Reporters
The recklessness and inconsistency displayed by President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) in
formulating a proposal for a peace agreement with China within a decade raises
great concerns over his ability to handle major cross-strait talks, Democratic
Progressive Party (DPP) Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (½²^¤å) said yesterday.
Ma¡¦s explanation of his initiative is ¡§loose and simplistic,¡¨ Tsai said. ¡§We
didn¡¦t see any sophisticated deliberation and planning behind the proposal.¡¨
The remarks came in response to Ma¡¦s announcement yesterday that the government
would obtain the public¡¦s approval through a referendum before pushing for a
peace pact with China.
Ma¡¦s position on referendums is inconsistent, Tsai said, because he opposed one
when he was pushing for negotiations for the Economic Cooperation Framework
Agreement (ECFA), which turned out to be neither transparent nor supervised by
the legislature.
While the DPP has always called for a peaceful framework based on bilateral
negotiations between sovereign entities, Ma¡¦s initiative would proceed under a
¡§one China¡¨ framework, which would leave Taiwan without bargaining chips, she
said at a campaign stop in Greater Taichung.
Tsai added that Ma appeared to be manipulating the critical issue, which would
have a great impact on Taiwan¡¦s future, to benefit his presidential campaign.
At a separate setting yesterday, DPP spokesman Chen Chi-mai (³¯¨äÁÚ) said that
because Mainland Affairs Council Chairwoman Lai Shin-yuan (¿à©¯´D) told the
legislature on Wednesday that a referendum on the initiative was not necessary
if most people supported it, only for the Presidential Office to later say that
a referendum would be required, the Ma administration¡¦s position on referendums
was inconsistent.
Ma referred to his proposal as a peace ¡§agreement,¡¨ which is usually signed
between two belligerents, rather than a country-to-country ¡§treaty,¡¨ DPP
spokesman Liang Wen-jie (±ç¤å³Ç) said, adding that Ma¡¦s approach risked placing
Taiwan under the ¡§one China¡¨ framework.
¡§Ma¡¦s impromptu initiative on this major issue is of great concern and is
questionable,¡¨ Liang said.
DPP Legislator Tsai Huang-liang (½²·×·ã) described Ma¡¦s talk about a referendum as
a ¡§two-handed tactic¡¨ to benefit his presidential campaign.
¡§He has never supported referendums in the past and now he¡¦s supportive ¡X this
is clearly a campaign strategy,¡¨ he said.
Ma used to list the removal of Chinese missiles aimed at Taiwan as a
prerequisite for bilateral talks, DPP Legislator Yeh Yi-jin (¸©y¬z) said.
¡§Now he¡¦s grown tired of bringing it up,¡¨ Yeh said.
On the pan-blue side, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislators rallied behind
Ma and his proposal.
KMT Legislator Lin Yu-fang (ªL§¤è) said seeking a referendum prior to talks on a
peace treaty was a ¡§brilliant tactic¡¨ because now ¡§the KMT is running the show.¡¨
¡§Now the ball is in the DPP¡¦s court. If the DPP rejects the idea, could it be
that it is against permanent peace across the Taiwan Strait and the contention
that Taiwan¡¦s future should be decided by the people?¡¨ Lin said.
KMT Legislator Wu Yu-sheng (§d¨|ª@) said a referendum on whether to start
negotiations with China on a peace agreement cannot be interpreted as a
plebiscite for independence or for unification.
The idea proposed by Ma could put the issue of the future direction of the
country up for discussion during the campaign period, above the level of debates
on cross-strait policy and competition among political parties in the election,
he said.
KMT caucus whip Chao Li-yun (»¯ÄR¶³) said the KMT caucus would propose a referendum
on the issue when necessary.
¡§The DPP used to employ the tactic of referendums to boost its campaigns. Why
can¡¦t the KMT initiate a referendum?¡¨ she said.
Chao said the idea to negotiate a peace accord with China was no different from
that proposed by former president Chen Shui-bian (³¯¤ô«ó) on whether Taiwan needed
to sign an agreement with China to build a peaceful and stable interaction
framework in 2003, when Tsai Ing-wen was chairperson of the Mainland Affairs
Council.
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