| '1992 consensus' crucial to maintaining peace: Hu By Xing Zhigang (China Daily)
 Updated: 2006-04-17 05:29
 
 Communist Party of China (CPC) chief Hu Jintao yesterday underlined the 
importance of the "1992 consensus" to maintaining cross-Straits peace while 
calling for a fight against "Taiwan independence."
 
 
 
 During his meeting with Lien Chan, honorary chairman of Taiwan's opposition 
Kuomintang (KMT), Hu described the consensus as the vital foundation for 
achieving cross-Straits peace and development.
 |  |  |  
 | President Hu 
 Jintao(R) meets with former chairman of Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang 
 (KMT) Lien Chan at the Great Hall of People in Beijing on Sunday. 
 [Xinhua] |  |  The consensus refers to a 1992 informal agreement under which Beijing and 
Taipei acknowledge that both the mainland and Taiwan belong to one China with 
each side having different interpretations of its political meaning.
 "In recent years, there have been continued ups and downs in cross-Straits 
relations. The main reason is that some people have ignored the will of the 
people to deny the '1992 consensus'," said Hu, general secretary of the CPC 
Central Committee.
 "Facts have shown that only by adhering to the '1992 consensus' can both 
sides of the Straits realize peace, development and common prosperity."
 The top leader added that both sides of the Straits can "resume talks on an 
equal footing as soon as possible" on the basis of the consensus.
 Hu refrained from naming Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian of the ruling 
pro-"independence" Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) but his overtures were 
apparently in response to Chen's latest rejection of the consensus.
 While meeting KMT Chairman Ma Ying-jeou in Taipei on April 3, Chen said the 
"1992 consensus" does not exist at all and should not be considered the basis 
for resuming cross-Straits talks.
 Since taking power in May 2000, Chen and the DPP have stepped up their push 
for formal "independence" of the island, fuelling tensions across the Straits.
 "Only by opposing and curbing 'Taiwan independence' can 
we remove the biggest threat to the development of peaceful and stable 
cross-Straits relations," said Hu in his one-hour meeting with Lien. 
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