| Mainland's top cross-Straits negotiator diesBy Xing Zhigang (China Daily)
 Updated: 2005-12-26 05:27
 
 
 Condolences and tributes have been pouring in from around the mainland and 
across the Taiwan Straits following the death of Wang Daohan, the mainland's top 
negotiator with Taiwan, who helped open the door to cross-Straits talks in the 
early 1990s. 
 Wang, president of the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits 
(ARATS), passed away in Shanghai on Saturday at 90. 
 
 
 
 A 
mourning hall will be set up at Wang's home in Shanghai but the date of his 
funeral service has not been decided.
 |  Wang Daohan
 |  Born in 1915 in East China's Anhui Province, Wang served as secretary of the 
Shanghai Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC), and 
vice-mayor and mayor of Shanghai between 1980 and 1986. 
 In December 1991, he took over the presidency of the ARATS, a semi-official 
body for dealing with cross-Straits ties in the absence of official links 
between the two sides. 
 In April 1993, Wang and Koo Chen-fu, then chairman of the Taiwan-based 
Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF), held the first ever cross-Straits high-level, 
non-governmental talks since 1949 in Singapore. 
 In October 1998, they held the second talks in Shanghai and reached a 
four-point consensus involving cross-Straits dialogue on political issues. 
 The landmark Wang-Koo meetings were considered milestones in cross-Straits 
relations by starting rapprochement between the mainland and Taiwan. 
 The Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, the mainland's top government 
body in charge of cross-Straits ties, told China Daily yesterday that it would 
hold a memorial service for Wang at its office today. The service is open to the 
public. 
 On Saturday, leaders of three major opposition parties in Taiwan offered 
their deep condolences over Wang's death while hailing his great contribution to 
the development of cross-Straits ties. 
 Wang played an important role in promoting cross-Straits relations and made 
great contributions to the development of peaceful exchanges across the Taiwan 
Straits, said Kuomintang (KMT) Chairman Ma Ying-jeou in his message of 
condolence to the ARATS. KMT honorary chairman Lien Chan praised Wang as a model 
for successors in dealing with cross-Straits ties. 
 James Soong, chairman of the People First Party (PFP), and New Party Chairman 
Yok Mu-ming also expressed their appreciation and admiration for Wang's efforts 
to push for better cross-Straits ties. 
 Taiwan's SEF also sent a letter of consolation to the ARATS on Saturday, 
expressing deep sorrow at Wang's death. 
 The SEF would like to send a representative to Wang's funeral if his family 
allows, said You Ying-lung, secretary-general of the SEF. 
 
 (China Daily 12/26/2005 page1)  
 
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