China Proposes 10 Measures Regarding Taiwan; MAC Urges Businesses to Stand with Government
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AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) called on domestic business groups not to be used as tools to pressure the government in response to China's newly proposed 10 measures for Taiwan, warning that the measures are politically motivated to divide Taiwan.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What did the Mainland Affairs Council urge Taiwanese business groups to do?
- A: The Mainland Affairs Council urged Taiwanese business groups to stand with the government and refuse to be used as tools to pressure it.
- Q: Who is planning to hold a press conference on the 20th to pressure the Taiwanese government?
- A: Hsu Shu-po, the Chairman of the General Chamber of Commerce, plans to hold the press conference on the 20th.
- Q: According to the Mainland Affairs Council, what is the nature of China's ten measures regarding Taiwan?
- A: The Mainland Affairs Council stated that these ten measures are a political deal privately negotiated between the KMT and the Communist Party.
- Q: What are the political prerequisites required for exporting Taiwan's agricultural and fishery products to mainland China?
- A: The political prerequisites required are the 1992 Consensus and opposition to Taiwan independence.
- Q: How did the Mainland Affairs Council characterize the Chinese Communist Party's ten measures in terms of economic exchange?
- A: The Mainland Affairs Council characterized them as having politicized, instrumentalized, and weaponized simple economic and trade exchange measures.