Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  China, Taiwan resume direct flights
Last updated: 2008-07-04


China, Taiwan resume direct flights
2008-07-04

Category
Direct Link Issues
Nations
China
City
Guangzhou
Zhuhai
States
Guangdong
Metropolitan
Shanghai
Borough/District
Nanhui
People
Ma Ying-jeou
Chen Shui-bian
Company
China Southern Airlines
Source
(AFP)
TAOYUAN, Taiwan (AFP) - China and Taiwan resumed regular direct flights Friday for the first time in six decades, ushering in what Beijing called a "new start" in the cross-strait relations.

In the most visible sign yet of a new openness toward the mainland under new Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, the two sides -- which split in 1949 after a civil war -- welcomed passenger flights directly from each other's territory.

"This is a sacred moment," said Liu Shaoyong, the chairman of China Southern Airlines, who piloted the first flight from the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou to Taiwan himself.

"Flying over the strait to Taiwan is like coming home," he told a crowd of well-wishers at the airport welcoming ceremony. "It feels good."

The 100 Chinese tourists aboard got the red-carpet treatment on arrival, including jets of water shooting over the plane, to symbolise the cleaning of dusty travellers, as well as a traditional Chinese "lion dance".

"We were lucky to be on the plane," said Wang Yu, a businessman from Zhuhai in southern China. "Many people were fighting for seats on the inaugural flight."

Ties between Taiwan and China have always been better than the public hostility from the two sides has acknowledged, and trade between them last year was more than 100 billion dollars.

But officially, China sees Taiwan as its territory waiting to be reclaimed by force if needed -- and the Strait, heavily armed on both sides, has long been one of the world's most dangerous potential military flashpoints.

Taiwan banned direct trade and transport links following its split from the communist mainland, but Ma's election opened the door to warmer ties after an especially frosty period under his pro-independence predecessor Chen Shui-bian.

The two sides held their first direct talks in a decade last month.

Those talks led to the flights agreement -- a deal that, for four days a week at least, will eliminate the time-consuming stopovers in Hong Kong or elsewhere that have been the bane of travellers between the two sides.

"Today is a new start in the history of exchanges between the two sides," Wang Yi, director of China's Taiwan Affairs Office, said in Beijing.

"At present, cross-Strait relations are facing a rare opportunity for development," Wang said.

Changes have been rapid since Ma took office.

Taiwan banks can now exchange Chinese currency, limits on Taiwanese investment on the mainland have been eased, and some Chinese media outlets which had been banned on the island now have clearance to work.

There will be 36 round-trip flights across the Taiwan Strait weekly, operating from Friday to Monday between six Taiwanese airports and five on the mainland.

The service will meet growing demand after Taiwan allowed up to 3,000 visitors a day from China, giving a much-needed boost to the island's sluggish economy.

More than 700 Chinese nationals in 26 tour groups were to arrive Friday from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and two other cities, while nine flights were set from China to Taiwan.

"I am thrilled to take the first mainland-bound flight in this new charter service," said Zhou Wan-rong, chairman of the student association of Chinghua University in Taiwan.

 Ma Ying-jeou  
  Profile4 News160Gallery8Links  
  Taiwan to accept "unification" pandas from China (2008-08-15)
  World leaders quash qualms, go to Olympic opening (2008-08-06)
  China defense minister: Positive changes in Taiwan (2008-08-03)
  Taiwan's Ma to confirm warming China ties (2008-08-03)
  China, Taiwan resume direct flights (2008-07-04)
  Taiwan, China set to launch historic weekend flights (2008-07-03)
  Taiwan says talks with China 'open new page' (2008-06-14)
  China, Taiwan sign historic deals on travel (2008-06-13)
  China, Taiwan agree to exchanges during historic talks (2008-06-12)
  Taiwan, China talk about adding charter flights (2008-06-12)
  Taiwan envoy in China for historic talks (2008-06-12)
  China and Taiwan start talks but avoid politics (2008-06-12)
  Taiwan envoy in China for historic talks (2008-06-11)
  Taiwan, China talk about adding charter flights (2008-06-11)
  Taiwan envoy leaves on historic trip to China (2008-06-11)
  China invites Taiwan to more talks as ties warm (2008-05-28)
  China's Hu calls for peace with Taiwan at historic meeting (2008-05-28)
  Taiwan pushes for greater global role (2008-05-28)
  Asian governments forced to act as oil prices soar (2008-05-25)
  China says it is preparing to restart talks with Taiwan (2008-05-22)
  China pledges reconciliation with Taiwan (2008-05-22)
  China official: Taiwan relations better (2008-05-22)
  Taiwan's Ma sworn in as president on China pledge (2008-05-20)
  China invites Taiwan party head to visit (2008-05-17)
  Taiwan, China see progress from historic talks (2008-04-12)
Related People
  • Chen Shui-bian
  • Su Tseng-chang
  • Wang Jin-pyng
  • Lien Chan
  • Frank Hsieh
  • Related Events
  • China-Taiwan
  • Taiwan Chen Shui-bian Admin.
  • 2005 Taiwan Local Elections
  • Taiwan Diplomacy
  • 2006 Taiwan Corruption Scandal

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [US Election 2008]: McCain says he will include Democrats in Cabinet (14:43 9/7)


    [2008 Hurricane Ike]: Ike blasts Turks and Caicos, floods Haiti again (14:43 9/7)

    [2008 Hurricane Hanna]: Hanna rolls into Connecticut with heavy rain (10:55 9/7)

    [2008 U.S. Automakers Downturn]: Auto industry to press Congress for $50B in loans (09:55 9/7)


    [2008 PGA Tour]: Villegas takes the lead in St. Louis (14:45 9/7)


    [2008 NFL]: Falcons QB throws TD on first NFL pass (14:45 9/7)

    [2008 Beijing Olympics]: Long-term plan aids marketing of Michael Phelps (14:43 9/7)


    [2007-8 Oil Crisis]: OPEC considers cutting oil production (14:43 9/7)

    [2008 U.S. Recession]: Battered stocks face another tough week (14:43 9/7)

    [U.S. Markets]: Battered stocks face another tough week (14:43 9/7)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.