“Both sides should respect each other’s values and way of life,” Ma told Xi.
Chinese President Xi Jinping told Taiwan’s leader Ma Ying-jeou that the two sides are “one family” and cannot be pulled apart, as they began landmark summit in Singapore.
“No force can pull us apart,” Xi told Ma. “We are one family.”
Xi and Ma had earlier exchanged a historic handshake, smiling broadly and waving to a huge pack of assembled media before going behind closed doors.
The meeting, at the Shangri-La Hotel in the city-state of Singapore, is a high point in the two leaders’ efforts to bridge the divisions of civil war and decades of animosity.
No agreements or joint statements are expected from the encounter between two sides that still refuse to formally recognise each other’s legitimacy, and the meeting’s lasting significance remains to be seen.
But the encounter is undeniably historic: the previous occasion was in 1945, when Communist revolutionary leader Mao Zedong met with China’s nationalist President Chiang Kai-shek in a failed reconciliation attempt.
The later Communist takeover forced Chiang’s armies and about two million followers to flee to Taiwan, then a backwater island province, leaving a national rupture that has preoccupied both sides ever since.
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