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Historic weekend charter flight with mainland tourists lands in Taiwan
2008/07/04

Tourists from east China's Jiangsu Province move their luggages before boarding the flight heading for Taipei in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, July 4, 2008. The flight, MU5001 with over 170 passengers, took off at 8:05 a.m. Friday morning.(Xinhua/Han Yuqing)
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    TAIPEI, July 4 (Xinhua) -- The first weekend charter flight across the Taiwan Strait landed here early on Friday morning amid many's expectation to commute between the two sides within a day.

    The first of the historic flights, which took off at 6:31 a.m. from Guangzhou, capital of China's southern Guangdong Province, arrived at about 8:10 a.m. after a 1,124-km journey.

    More than 100 mainland tourists aboard the Airbus A330 of China Southern Airlines (CSA) became the first group on a sight-seeing tour allowed to Taiwan amid warming cross-Strait ties.

    Another four weekend chartered flights also took off on Friday morning from Beijing, Shanghai, Nanjing and Xiamen respectively.

    Flight MF881 from Xiamen of the southeastern Fujian Province, took off at 7:16 a.m. and arrived at the Songshan Airport in Taipei.

    Lee Maw-sheng, president of the Taiwan Businessmen Association in Shanghai, was one of many business people applauding the service.

    "I can have breakfast at home in Taipei, fly to Shanghai for business and come back for supper with my family," he said while awaiting to board a weekend charter flight at Shanghai Pudong airport.

    He compared the weekend service to the first "rainbow" that appeared over the Taiwan Strait after the air between the two sides cleared.

    The more frequent, less expensive weekend flights saved passengers more time and money, said another Taiwan businessman surnamed Tung.

    On the flight to take off from Taipei to Shanghai, an eight-month-old baby was traveling with his mother and grandmother to visit his father working in Shanghai.

    Taipei residents are happy that Taipei Songshan airport is one of eight terminals on the island for the weekend service.

    Previous charter flights at festivals landed and took off at Taoyuan airport, 40 km away from the city which handled international flights.

    At Taipei Songshan airport where most flights left for destinations around the island, actor Will Liu told local media it was the first time for him not to get up at 4 a.m. to fly to the mainland.

    "I used to board the plane at Taoyuan airport and transfer in Hong Kong on my way to Shanghai. It took about six hours and now the time is almost half," he said.

    Frequent travelers like him had witnessed that charter flights across the Strait had expanded from one major festival to four andthen every weekend, Friday to Monday, since 2003.

    A total of 760 mainland tourists from the mainland are also on the unprecedented journey to Taiwan and will stay for 10 days.

    "I have lots of friends in the mainland and always told them I would give them the best treat when they visited Taiwan. Now I can fulfill my promises," said famed Taiwan singer Chow Wah-kin at the Beijing International Airport. "I have wasted too much of my life on transferring."

    In Beijing, a ceremony was held in the morning for the launch of the cross-Strait weekend charters as well as mainland tourists visiting Taiwan.

    Wang Yi, director of both the Taiwan Work Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council's Taiwan Affairs Office, said Friday marked a new beginning in the history of cross-Strait exchanges.

    Cross-Strait relations were facing a hard-won development opportunity, and direct contacts between the compatriots on both sides must be beefed up to enhance the mutual understanding and achieve new progress in the peaceful development of cross-Strait ties, he said.



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