Make us your homepage



  Top100  


  Classifieds  


  News  


  Help  


  Contacts  

Search: 

 



News

News category


Historic China-Taiwan flights a sign of warming relations

04.07.2008 14:03 Shopping - Source: cbc.ca

Direct tourist flights began Friday between China and Taiwan for the first time in six decades, a sign of warming relations between the longtime foes.

A China Southern Airlines flight carrying 230 passengers was the first mainland China flight to touch down in Taiwan, arriving at the Taoyuan International Airport in northern Taiwan.

Fire trucks shot water at the plane in a welcoming gesture. Passengers, some wearing matching white-and-pink shirts, were greeted by an arch made of colourful balloons, traditional dragon dances and greetings from Taiwanese officials.

"From today onward, regular commercial flights will replace the rumbling warplanes over the skies of the Taiwan Strait, and relations between the two sides will become better and better," pilot Liu Shaoyun said after the 90-minute flight from Guangzhou in southern China.

Liu is also chair of the Chinese airline.

Travel halted amid civil war

The route was opened in the hopes of improving relations between the self-ruled island of 23 million and China, which claims Taiwan as its territory.

It's the result of diplomatic efforts by new Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou.

While limited charter flights have been allowed for holidays in recent years, establishing regular service marks a major step forward after travel between the rivals halted amid civil war in 1949.

Taiwan banned direct travel to and from China for decades as a security measure, and most tourists in China were also barred.

Other flights landing Friday included a Xiamen Airlines flight that landed at Sungshan airport in downtown Taipei, opening the city to international traffic for the first time in three decades. Taiwan's China Airlines also flew more than 300 Taiwanese on a charter flight to Shanghai earlier in the day.

Before boarding an Air China flight to Taiwan from Beijing, Shao Qiwei, head of China's Tourism Administration, said the regular flights will "build a bridge of friendship" with Taiwan.

Taiwanese officials have vowed to prevent confrontations between visitors and anti-Communist activists.

Followers of Falun Gong, a group opposed to China's government, has ignored requests by the municipal government to stay away from several popular tourist sites.

Falun Gong, a spiritual movement rooted in Buddhism, Taoism and traditional Chinese beliefs, has been persecuted in China, and Beijing banned it as an "evil cult" in 1999.

Taiwan's China Airlines also flew more than 300 Taiwanese on a charter flight to Shanghai earlier in the day.

Unification a goal of the flights

Despite lingering tensions, trade and travel between the two sides have boomed over the past decade.

Mainlanders have visited Taiwan under various cultural exchange programs in limited numbers, and had to go first to Hong Kong or other destinations before travelling on to Taiwan.

Mainland authorities agreed to the tourist and regular flight links in talks with Taiwan last month, apparently hoping the increased regular contacts could help it push its goal of unification.

By doing so, Beijing was also granting Taiwan's wish to stimulate the island's sluggish economy with tourism revenues from China.

The steps could also further push economic integration.

The Ma administration has promised to ease investment restrictions to boost Taiwanese industries' competitiveness.

Thousands of Taiwanese have set up high-tech, textile and other factories in China to take advantage of lower labour costs.

With files from the Associated Press
  •  

Related

Internal Links

IN DEPTH: TaiwanIN DEPTH: China

Consumer Headlines

Dairy farmers seek price increases due to soaring feed, fertilizer costsThe rising cost of fuel is hitting dairy farmers hard, their organization said Thursday, meaning Canadians may be paying more for products including cheese, butter and ice cream.Oil prices slip backOil prices trickled back below $145 US a barrel Friday as the U.S. dollar strengthened slightly against the euro and the Japanese yen.First Canadian case linked to U.S. salmonella outbreakHealth officials have discovered the first Canadian case linked to a massive salmonella outbreak in the United States that has sickened more than 900 people.Nunavut government could have avoided fuel price hikes: NTIThe head of Nunavut's Inuit organization says high fuel prices in Nunavut, which rose even higher this week, are the product of bad government, and called on the territory to seek alternatives to price hikes.Rush on for firewood despite higher pricesSome people who sell firewood in Nova Scotia say the prospect of record home-heating fuel prices this winter is driving up business now, even with wood costing more.  

Consumer Life Features

CRUDE AWAKENINGSPricey oilFrom bloomers to bagels, the trickle-down costVIDEOElectric carDoing it yourself (3:02)TECHNOLOGYDesign softwareThe building blocks of LegoBLOGFood BytesThe greatest show on earthBLOGComm-OdditiesLife fetches $384,000 on eBay

People who read this also read …

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 



« August 2008 »
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Last added news

Federal inspectors not at fault for listeriosis outbreak: agriculture minister 27.08.2008 22:03 Federal inspectors in charge of overseeing health standards at a Maple Leaf Foods processing plant at the centre of a deadly outbreak of listeriosis were doing their job properly, Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said Wednesday, shortly after Maple Leaf's president took the blame for distributing the tainted meat that caused the outbreak.

Canadian gas prices aren't so bad, industry expert insists 27.08.2008 22:02 While Canadians complain about the soaring price of gasoline at the pumps, oil industry experts say people in this country are actually paying the second-lowest prices in the Western world.

Food safety agency allowing producers to police themselves: ex-inspector 27.08.2008 18:01 Federal inspectors are spending less time on the factory floor and relying more on food producers to monitor themselves, the head of the union for federal food safety inspectors said Wednesday.

Larger snack sizes may cause consumers to eat less: study 27.08.2008 18:01 Calorie-counters may not be helping themselves when they buy snacks like cookies, chips and candies in smaller packages, according to a study to be released in the October issue of the Journal of Consumer Research.

Telecom complaints body gets full-time boss 27.08.2008 14:01 Howard Maker, a former banking services ombudsman, has been named the head of the Commissioner for Complaints for Telecommunications Services.

Belief in cancer myths risky: report 27.08.2008 14:00 People worldwide have a poor understanding of what causes cancer and therefore underestimate the importance of factors they can control, like diet and alcohol consumption, according to a report released on Wednesday.

Transcontinental shares up on $1.7B deal to print Globe and Mail 27.08.2008 14:00 Transcontinental Inc., which calls itself Canada's largest printer, says it has won a $1.7 billion contract to print the Globe and Mail in most markets outside the prairies between 2010 and 2028.

Area last in state in home prices 27.08.2008 08:02 The Toledo metro area was the worst spot in Ohio for home prices and mortgage refinance values in the past year, dropping nearly 4 percent.

Fresh Market to open Sept. 17 at Westgate 27.08.2008 08:02 Fresh Market, a Greenboro, N.C., gourmet grocery chain, has set Sept. 17 as the opening date for its store in the Westgate Village Shopping Center in West Toledo.

Women smokers closing in on men: survey 26.08.2008 22:01 About one in five Canadians smoked daily or occasionally in 2007, with males slightly outnumbering females, Health Canada reported.

All news | News archive | RSS feed

Home    |    Add your site    |    Member login    |    Lost id    |    Contact Us    |    Help   |    Advertise    |    Privacy Policy

© Top100biz Inc., 2004-2005. This site is powered by AlphaStoreDesign.com