President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) would not address the two sides of Taiwan Strait as “two nations” in describing cross-strait relations, the Presidential Office said yesterday.
“According to the Constitution, the Republic of China [ROC] is a sovereign  nation, and mainland China is an ‘area’ under the structure of the ROC  Constitution,” Presidential Office Spokesman Wang Yu-chi (王郁琦) said.  
“We do not recognize the Chinese communist authorities’ sovereignty. We  only hold a non-denial attitude toward its existence in the ‘Mainland area,’”  Wang said. 
Wang made the remarks in response to a report by the  Chinese-language Liberty Times (the Taipei Times’ sister paper) about changes  made by the Presidential Office to Ma’s wording after a meeting with US  Representative James Sensenbrenner Jr on Wednesday.
Meeting the US  congressman in the Presidential Office, Ma discussed the government’s signing of  an economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) with China and called on the  US Congress to supports Taiwan’s efforts to sign a bilateral extradition  agreement with the US.
A press release the Presidential Office issued to  media at about 12pm on Wednesday quoted Ma as saying that his administration  expected the signing of an ECFA to “institutionalize the more than NT$100  billion [US$3.1 billion] trade volume between the two nations.”
In a  press release on the Presidential Office Web site later in the day, however, the  term “two nations” was replaced with “two sides.”
Wang said the phrase  had been used by “mistake” by a new employee and that the Presidential Office  made the correction immediately after discovering the mistake. The president  would not make such a mistake, he said. 
Wang said the term used by the  government reflected the “status quo” across the Taiwan Strait under the  Constitution and that such a constitutional structure was revised by former  president Lee Teng-hui (李登輝) and followed by the Democratic Progressive Party  government. 
“It also reflects the political reality of the Strait. [The  description] shows no signs of weakness. Instead, it highlights the sovereignty  of the ROC,” Wang said.
Source: Taipei Times 2010/02/19



 









