(Xinhua) 09:50, March 14, 2024 BEIJING, March 13 (Xinhua) -- The historical trend toward a stronger China, national rejuvenation, and reunification cannot be stopped, said a Chinese mainland spokesperson on Wednesday. Despite the current complex situation across the Taiwan Strait, the fundamentals for cross-Strait relations and its development direction have not changed and will not, said Chen Binhua, a spokesperson for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, at a press conference. The mainland will uphold the one-China principle and the 1992 Consensus, refine institutions and policies to improve the wellbeing of Taiwan compatriots, advance cross-Strait integrated development and step up joint efforts to promote the Chinese culture, Chen said. The mainland will resolutely fight "Taiwan independence" separatism and contain interference by external forces, give firm support to patriotic and pro-reunification forces in Taiwan, and unite Taiwan compatriots to jointly work for the peaceful development of cross-Strait relations, he said. Chen urged people of Taiwan to have a clear understanding of what is good for them and what is not, uphold the overall interests of the Chinese nation, and work with people on the mainland for national reunification and rejuvenation. |
Arkansas cannot prevent 2 teachers from discussing critical race theory in classroom, judge rulesIn the NIL landscape, schools are turning to companies to train and manage inSlow to expand, internet casino gambling is the future of US betting, industry execs sayThe View's Whoopi Goldberg reveals her daughter got pregnant at the age of 15 as 'REVENGE'Rashee Rice warning sent to NFL teams before 2023 Draft amid Chiefs star's legal troublesAirbnb shares slide on lower revenue forecast despite a doubling of net incomeSophie Duchess of Edinburgh beams as she leaves private members club with friends in MayfairThe View's Whoopi Goldberg reveals her daughter got pregnant at the age of 15 as 'REVENGE'Republican congressmen introduce bill that would protect NCAA and conferences from legal attacksAlgeria's leader demands justice over French colonial