Activities on the Chinese mainland to mark the 60th anniversary
of the liberation of Taiwan from Japan have improved relations
across the Taiwan Straits, according to a visiting scholar from
China's Taiwan Province.
Taiwan was ceded to Japan under the "Treaty of Shimonoseki," signed
by the Qing Dynasty government after it was defeated in the
Sino-Japanese war (1894-95). Only on October 25, 1945, after World
War II had ended, did Taiwan formally reclaim its Chinese
identity.
A big celebration ceremony will be held in Beijing tomorrow, some
six decades later.
"The day marks the time when Taiwan returned to the motherland,"
said Wang Hsiaopo, a professor from the National Taiwan University.
"The day tells us we are always Chinese."
"There could be no reunification (of the mainland with Taiwan) if
Taiwan wasn't returned from Japan."
Wang made these remarks at a commemoration conference in Beijing
yesterday, attended by mainland officials and visiting Taiwan
scholars and war veterans.
While emphasizing the contribution Taiwan compatriots played in
national liberation, Wang said patriotism for the motherland played
a key role in the victory.
"The Taiwan people had a deep feeling of patriotism while fighting
against the Japanese imperialists," Wang said.
"Today, that feeling continues to inspire people on both sides of
the Taiwan Straits, pushing forward reunification."
A photo gallery to commemorate the anniversary opens today at the
National Museum of China in Beijing.
(China Daily October 24, 2005)