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Taiwan President calls on China to engage in talks with Taipei

The National Day address is used by Taiwan's presidents to put forward their position and outlook on relations with China.

Taiwan President calls on China to engage in talks with Taipei Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen delivers a speech during National Day celebrations in front of the Presidential Building in Taipei, Taiwan, on October 10, 2016.

Taipei: Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen called on China to engage in talks, pledging to maintain peace with the island`s giant neighbour, amid a near five-month impasse after Beijing halted official communications with the self-ruled island.

However, Tsai, in her first National Day speech, stopped short of conceding a crucial principle that Beijing has said is needed for talks to resume, that Taiwan is a part of China, also referred to between the two sides as the "1992 consensus".

Tsai`s proponents have said she has been sending olive branches to China, but also choosing her words carefully so as not to lose her key anti-China support base at home. 

"The two sides of the strait should sit down and talk as soon as possible," Tsai said in her address, referring to the Taiwan Strait separating the island from the mainland.

The National Day address is used by presidents to put forward their position and outlook on relations with China.

"Anything can be included for discussion, as long as it is conducive to the development of cross-strait peace and the welfare of people on both sides," she said in a speech to foreign and domestic dignitaries broadcast live on Taiwan television.

Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) took power in late May after a landslide election win over the incumbent Nationalist party.

Beijing distrusts the DPP because it traditionally advocates independence for Taiwan, which China deems a wayward province to be taken back by force if necessary. 

Tsai said she would maintain a consistent, predictable and sustainable relationship with China. 

She reiterated that the relationship should be based on the "accumulated outcomes enabled by over 20 years of cross-strait interactions and negotiations since 1992."

"Our pledges will not change, and our goodwill will not change. But we will not bow to pressure, and we will of course not revert to the old path of confrontation," she said. 

The so-called 1992 consensus, which was agreed with a China-friendly Nationalist government, acknowledges Taiwan and China are part of a single China, but allows both sides to interpret who is the ruler. 

Last week, Tsai appointed a pro-China politician to be her envoy for a meeting of Asia-Pacific leaders next month in Peru.

The APEC meetings have traditionally offered an opportunity for senior officials from Taiwan and China to meet, because the grouping includes Taiwan, not as a country but as a member economy.

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