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Taiwan's President Invites China's Leaders to Visit
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D42758:2AB91D3

Chen Shui-bian says visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao would help
clear up misunderstandings between two rivals

The president of Taiwan has invited China's leaders to visit the
island, as Beijing offered economic concessions and a pair of giant
pandas as goodwill gestures to its rival. Beijing responded coolly to
the offer of direct talks with Taiwan's government.

Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian says a visit by Chinese President Hu
Jintao would help clear up misunderstandings between the two rivals.
Mr. Chen says he hopes President Hu will come to see for himself and
gauge the sentiment of the Taiwan people.

However, China was cool to the idea.

Wang Zaixi is the vice chairman of China's Taiwan Affairs Office.

Mr. Wang says China can not hold talks with Mr. Chen unless his party
drops its pro-independence stance.

China considers Taiwan part of its territory.

Mr. Chen's conciliatory moves toward China came as Beijing said it
would allow Chinese tourists to visit Taiwan and increase fruit
imports from the island.

Beijing also offered to give two giant pandas to Taiwan - a gesture
reminiscent of China's gift to the United States after former
President Richard Nixon's 1972 trip that led to the normalization of
ties between the two countries.







China's President Hu Jintao, right, talks with Taiwan's opposition
leader Lien Chan during a recent meeting in BeijingThe gestures follow
a visit to China by Lien Chan, head of Taiwan's Nationalist party, who
met with President Hu during his historic eight-day trip. It was the
first meeting between leaders of the Nationalist Party and the Chinese
Communist Party since the Nationalists fled to Taiwan and established
a separate government there at the end of the Chinese civil war in
1949.

Analysts say Beijing's warm welcome to Mr. Lien is aimed at
undermining support for President Chen and his pro-independence party.
China wants reunification with Taiwan and has threatened to attack the
island if Taipei takes steps toward formal independence.

National Taiwan University politics professor Lee Si-kuen says
goodwill gestures will not be enough to narrow differences between the
two sides.

"Any breakthrough between the two sides would be welcome news. But …
after the news event, people in Taiwan will soon realize the reality
is there - the hostility between the two sides," Lee says. "Look, we
will face a very important decision in Congress - an arms procurement
program. If we pass [the program], the tensions will mount again."

The Taiwan government wants to purchase billions of dollars worth of
sophisticated weaponry, primarily from the United States. Beijing
repeatedly has pushed Washington to stop selling arms to the island.

Mr. Lien's visit has received mixed reactions in Taiwan. Some welcome
the signs of improvement in cross-Strait relations that came with the
visit, while others protested his trip.

Another opposition leader, James Soong of the People's First Party,
will travel to China later this week. He is expected to carry a
message to the Chinese leadership from President Chen.