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Jiang: China strives for regional, world peace (10/25/2002)
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President Jiang Zemin said on Oct. 24 in College
Station, Texas, that China not only values world peace and
stability, but has been making steady efforts towards that
goal.
Speaking at a function hosted by the
George Bush Presidential Library, Jiang said that with its
growing development, opening-up and interactions with the
outside world, China's need for an international environment
of lasting peace and stability is also
growing.
"Strengthening peace and
development at both regional and global levels serves
China's fundamental interests," Jiang
said.
As the national conditions vary from
country to country, "it is perfectly normal for things,
countries, nations or regions to be different one way or
another," Jiang said.
Quoting a Confucius
maxim that "in human relationships, a gentleman seeks
harmony but not uniformity," Jiang said harmony
promotes coexistence and co-prosperity, whereas differences
foster mutual complementation and mutual
support.
"Harmony without sameness is an
important principle in the development of all social affairs
and relationships and in guiding people's conduct and
behavior," he stressed.
As an
Asian-Pacific country, the Chinese president said, China has
been striving for peace and stability in the region, having
resolved the land boundary question with most of its
neighbors through peaceful negotiations and "in the
spirit of good- neighborliness."
China is
also an active participant in such multiple cooperation
mechanisms as APEC, ARF and 10 plus 3, and has decided to
set up a China-ASEAN Free Trade Area in 10 years, he
added.
Jiang said that as "a staunch force
dedicated to peace in the Asia-Pacific region," China
stands "ready to work with the United States and other
countries in the region to promote a peaceful and prosperous
Asia-Pacific."
He said that an early
solution to the Taiwan question and an early accomplishment
of the peaceful reunification of China is conducive to peace
and stability in the Asia-Pacific and the world at
large.
The president said that in recent years,
personnel exchanges between the two sides of the Taiwan
Straits have been on the increase steadily and interactions
in the economic, cultural and other fields are also
expanding. "The people in Taiwan share our strong
desire for an early opening of the three direct
links."
"As far as solving the Taiwan
question is concerned, no formula is better than 'peaceful
reunification and one country, two systems,' and nothing
threatens peace and stability in the Straits more than
'Taiwan Independence'," the president said. He urged
the United States to stick to its commitment to the three
Sino-US Joint Communiques and the one China policy.
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