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TAIWAN NEWS
Historic China-Taiwan talks start long road to closer ties
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Feb 09, 2014


Taiwan court upholds ex-general's jail term on graft
Taipei (AFP) Feb 07, 2014 - Taiwan's supreme court said Friday it had rejected an appeal for a retired lieutenant-general serving a lengthy prison sentence in a high-profile bribery scandal.

The court said it was upholding its sentencing of ten years and four months for Yuan Hsiao-lung, the former deputy chief of the logistics command, on convictions of bribery, blackmail and leaking secrets.

Yuan was first convicted by a district court in 2009.

In a final ruling, the court rejected an appeal filed by prosecutor-general Huang Shyh-ming on the grounds that the sentence was too heavy since Yuan had confessed and that he did not make any illegal financial gains.

He was found guilty of seeking promotion by bribing his superiors with the help of a middleman, businessman Lin Chih-chung.

Lin promised to pay Tw$6 million ($200,000) to Yuan to persuade his superiors to promote him to the rank of general, in exchange for information on military contract bidding in 2006.

But Lin never actually paid the money and Yuan was not promoted before he retired in 2008.

Lin was found to have won several military contracts with Yuan's help, who leaked information on tenders.

The case revived rumours that some military officers were promoted to general through bribery during the 2000-2008 rule of former president Chen Shui-bian.

Taiwan has been rocked by a string of corruption scandals involving top officials in recent years, including Chen who is currently serving a 20-year jail term on multiple graft convictions.

Famed Taiwan film director indicted in naval base ploy
Taipei (AFP) Feb 07, 2014 - Acclaimed Taiwanese director Doze Niu was indicted on Friday for using false papers to take a Chinese cinematographer onto a naval base in Taiwan to scout film locations, prosecutors said.

Niu and award-winning cinematographer Cao Yu were both charged with violating a law that bans Chinese nationals from entering Taiwanese military facilities, prosecutors said. The offence is punishable by a maximum five-year jail term.

"Niu was aware that Chinese nationals were barred from entering a military port but brought Cao there for scouting. However, they were not found to have pried in military secrets or committed forgery," said prosecutor Huang Yuan-kuang.

Niu had repeatedly applied to the military to take Cao with him to scout locations for his upcoming movie "Military Paradise" at a naval base in the southern city of Kaohsiung but was rejected.

However, Cao got into the base in June last year by getting on a bus with the rest of Niu's crew members, who were on the approved list of visitors and also boarded a naval ship, according to prosecutors.

The navy decided to withdraw all assistance to Niu after the incident and reported him to prosecutors.

"We thank everyone for their concerns on the case and we respect the judicial process for all follow-up matters," said the film's production company Atom Cinema.

Niu, known for the Taiwanese blockbusters "Monga" and "Love," apologised on his Facebook page after the case surfaced and vowed to reflect on what happened.

"Filmmakers have often gone overboard and resorted to all possible means to make a great work and it's time to reflect," he wrote at the time.

Cao has twice won the cinematography gong at Taiwan's Golden Horse Film Awards, regarded as the Chinese-language Oscars.

"Military Paradise," set to hit theatres in the summer, is a comedy about a group of people on a frontline island preparing for a war that will probably never happen during the 1960s standoff between Taiwan and China, according to Atom Cinema.

China and Taiwan are gearing up for their first government-to-government meeting in more than six decades Tuesday -- but analysts say renewed political ties between the former bitter rivals may still be a long way off.

The Taiwanese government's Wang Yu-chi, who oversees the island's China policy, is scheduled to fly to the mainland on February 11 to meet his counterpart Zhang Zhijun, China's Taiwan Affairs Office chief, for talks set to last until February 14.

The meeting in Nanjing, in China's eastern Jiangsu province, is the fruit of years of efforts to normalise relations and marks the first official contact between sitting governments since the pair's acrimonious split in 1949.

That year, two million supporters of the nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek fled to Taiwan -- officially known as Republic of China -- after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong's Communists.

Ever since, the island and the mainland have been governed separately, both claiming to be the true government of China, only re-establishing contact in the 1990s through quasi-official organisations.

When the much-anticipated visit was announced at a January press conference, Taiwan's Wang said it had "crucial implications for further institutionalisation of the ties between the two sides of the Straits".

"It has a symbolic meaning. It introduces more confidence and trust between the two sides," Jia Qingguo, an international studies professor at Peking University said of the meeting, adding that it could bring about modest improvements in cooperation.

While Taiwan is likely to focus on reaping practical outcomes from the visit, such as securing economic benefits or security assurances, Jia said, China has more of an eye toward long-term integration of the island.

Beijing views Taiwan as a rebel region awaiting reunification with the mainland, and has repeatedly refused to renounce the possibility of using force to take back the island if necessary.

"From the mainland perspective, (China) probably attaches more importance to accelerating the process of economic integration, and also with a view to political unification in the long run," Jia said.

Taiwan wants to use the visit to raise issues including proposed liaison offices, bilateral efforts on regional economic integration and better healthcare for Taiwanese students studying on the mainland.

Decades of stalemate

The political thaw of a decades-long stalemate comes after the two sides have made cautious steps towards economic reconciliation in recent years.

Taiwanese president Ma Ying-jeou of the Beijing-friendly Kuomintang party came to power in 2008, presiding over a marked softening in tone from Taipei towards its giant neighbour and reinstating direct flights between the two sides.

In June 2010, Taiwan and China signed the landmark Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, a pact widely characterised as the boldest step yet towards reconciliation.

Yet despite the much-touted detente, Taipei and Beijing have still shunned all official contact, and negotiations since 2008 when Ma came to power have been carried out through proxies.

While these proxies -- the quasi-official Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) representing Taiwan, and the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS), for China -- have secured economic progress, they lacked the power to broach deeper-held differences.

Analysts say that only government-level officials can settle the crux of a lingering sovereignty dispute that sees each side claiming to be the sole legitimate government of China.

"The two government units will be authorised to handle policy-oriented affairs, while SEF and ARATS could be somewhat weakened in their functions," George Tsai, a political science professor at Taipei's Chinese Culture University told AFP.

Analysts will be watching the meeting closely to see if it could pave the way for talks between Ma and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping -- although chances of that happening any time soon are slim.

"Such (a) proposal could be dictated by the outcome of the coming meeting," Tsai said.

"Both sides are crossing the river by feeling for stones," he said, quoting a Chinese proverb to describe the cautious path Taipei and Beijing are following in the hope of greater progress.

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