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Kaohsiung mayor brings 'new voice'
(CFP)
Updated: 2009-05-22 08:23
Kaohsiung mayor brings 'new voice'
Kaohsiung Mayor Chen Chu (left) and Beijing Mayor Guo Jinlong pose for a photo Thursday during Chen Chu's visit to Beijing. Her four-day trip will also take her to Shanghai. [CFP]  Kaohsiung mayor brings 'new voice'

A senior figure in Taiwan's main opposition party began a landmark visit to the mainland Thursday, declaring "she was bringing a new voice".

Chen Chu, mayor of Kaohsiung - the island's second-biggest city - is the highest-ranking official from the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) to set foot on the mainland.

Chen's much-heralded visit will see her visiting Beijing and Shanghai to promote the 2009 World Games scheduled for July in her hometown - the largest international sporting event to be hosted by the island.

During her meeting with Beijing Mayor Guo Jinlong Thursday, Chen listened to the city's experience in holding the widely-acclaimed 2008 Olympics, and said Kaohsiung would learn from it.

She invited Guo to attend the opening ceremony of the World Games, and the Beijing mayor later told reporters he would be "very happy" if he could make it. She will also meet Shanghai Mayor Han Zheng and Chinese Olympic Committee Chairman Liu Peng, and invite sports administrators, athletes and the public to the city.

Chen has downplayed the political implications of the trip, saying it was in her capacity as the mayor of the host city of the World Games, and follows conventional practice of promoting the event globally.

Responding to opposition to her mainland visit from some of her fellow DPP members and pro-independence activists, Chen was quoted by Taiwan media as saying "I work for the interest of all Kaohsiung citizens, which does not contradict my own political standing".

The Taiwan media described her visiting as ice-breaking, a notion that Chen accepted.

"I brought new voices from Taiwan to the mainland, which previously heard mostly from the ruling Kuomintang (KMT)," Chen told reporters in Beijing Thursday.

Cross-Straits relations began to blossom after KMT's Ma Ying-jeou took office as the island's leader last May, defeating the DPP and easing tensions with the mainland through trade, travel and tourism agreements.

Analysts said Chen's visit is a milestone that may lead to more open communication between the mainland and Taiwan in the wake of warming ties.

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