China’s Xi tells ex-Taiwan leader ‘external interference’ cannot block unification

Chinese President Xi Jinping (right) meeting Taiwan’s former leader Ma Ying-jeou in Beijing on April 10. PHOTO: EPA-EFE
The meeting between Mr Xi and Mr Ma was the first since a landmark summit between the two men in 2015 when Mr Ma was still in office. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

BEIJING - Chinese President Xi Jinping said on April 10 that “external interference” would not stop China from unifying with Taiwan, as he met the island’s former leader in a rare display of cross-strait dialogue.

Taiwan’s former president Ma Ying-jeou is in China as part of what he has called a “journey of peace” to calm tensions with Beijing, which regards the self-governing Taiwan as its territory to be reunified with it. Taiwan rejects China’s sovereignty claims.

Mr Xi welcomed a delegation headed by Mr Ma to Beijing on the afternoon of April 10, Chinese and Taiwanese media reported, in a rare meeting between current or former leaders in Beijing and Taipei, and the first since a landmark summit between the two men in 2015 when Mr Ma was still in office.

“The Chinese nation has written the indivisible history of both sides of the Taiwan Strait and engraved the fact that our compatriots... are connected by blood,” Mr Xi said in footage of the meeting broadcast by Taiwan’s TVBS News.

“There is no force that can separate us... Differences in systems cannot change the objective fact that we belong to one nation and one people,” Mr Xi was shown telling Mr Ma across a glossy table in an ornate reception room in the capital.

“External interference cannot stop the historic cause of our reunion,” Mr Xi said.

Mr Ma has been leading a delegation of 20 Taiwanese students and has visited technology firms, universities and historical sites since arriving in China last week.

Former Taiwan president Ma Ying-jeou visiting the Great Wall of China in the outskirts of Beijing on April 9. PHOTO: AFP

In his remarks to Mr Xi, Mr Ma said “young people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait represent the future of the Chinese nation”.

“If war were to break out between the two sides, it would be an unbearable burden for the Chinese nation,” he said.

“Chinese people on both sides of the strait absolutely have ample wisdom to peacefully handle disputes and avoid conflicts,” said Mr Ma, adding that they should also “oppose Taiwan independence”.

Mr Ma served two terms as Taiwan’s leader between 2008 and 2016, representing the Kuomintang (KMT) party, which has long been more receptive to Beijing.

He oversaw an improvement in cross-strait ties and held a landmark summit with Mr Xi in Singapore in 2015, the first meeting between the political leaders of China and Taiwan since the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949.

But relations have plummeted since the 2016 election of his successor, Ms Tsai Ing-wen from the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), who rejects Beijing’s claims.

Since then, China has ratcheted up diplomatic and military pressure, and has refused to rule out using force to “unify” with Taiwan.

The election in January of Ms Tsai’s deputy Lai Ching-te stands to worsen cross-strait ties, with Beijing having denounced him as a “dangerous separatist”.

A spokesman for Mr Lai’s DPP said Mr Ma’s visit would “have a great impact on Taiwan” if he was speaking on behalf of the KMT.

“So far, we have not seen the KMT come forward to endorse or approve Ma’s visit, so we are very curious about (their) attitude (towards it),” Mr Wu Cheng said.

Mr Ma “seems to be a fan of China and likes to go to China”, Mr Wu said, adding: “Of course, we respect his personal preferences.”

Mr Lai has said he hopes to maintain the status quo with China.

Chinese warplanes and ships maintain a near-daily presence around the island, as Beijing has ramped up military pressure against Taipei using what experts say are “grey zone” actions – tactics that stop short of outright acts of war.

In March, Taiwan detected 36 Chinese warplanes around the island over a 24-hour period, the highest daily count in 2024.

Taiwan was among the issues discussed by US President Joe Biden and Mr Xi in a call last week.

The White House said Mr Biden pressed Mr Xi to ensure “peace and stability” across the Taiwan Strait ahead of Mr Lai’s inauguration in May.

Mr Xi told Mr Biden that Taiwan remains “an uncrossable red line” for Beijing, according to Chinese state media. AFP

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