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Xi Jinping and Ma Ying-jeou summit
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The hotline was agreed at the summit meeting in Singapore last month between President Ma Ying-jeou of Taiwan, left, and mainland head of state Xi Jinping . Photo: AFP

Hotline starts operating to link officials in mainland China, Taiwan, to help ease tensions

Mainland China and Taiwan officials began operating the first telephone hotline between the two sides on Wednesday, set up as a confidence building and tension reducing measure, with senior officials exchanging New Year’s greetings.

The step was agreed during a historic meeting between President Xi Jinping and his Taiwan counterpart Ma Ying-jeou in Singapore last month.

READ MORE: ‘We are brothers’: Xi hails closer ties with Taiwan as closed-door talks with Ma wrap up at historic Singapore summit

Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for Beijing’s Taiwan Affairs Office, said the first call was between Zhang Zhijun, director of the Taiwan Affairs Office, and Andrew Hsia, head of Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council. They wished each other a happy New Year.

Zhang and Hsia also talked about the important achievements both sides had made in the past year in promoting the peaceful development of relations, spokesman Ma said.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council confirmed the call took place, but did not immediately provide any other details.

Defeated Nationalist forces fled to Taiwan after losing a civil war with the communists in 1949. Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring what it deems a renegade province under its control.

Relations have improved rapidly since Ma Ying-jeou became Taiwan president in 2008 and the two have signed a series of landmark trade and tourism deals.

READ MORE: Taiwan presidential front runner says she wants stable ties with mainland China, but issue of future independence remains open

Deep suspicions still remain. Beijing reacted angrily earlier this month at the latest US plans to sell Taiwan weapons.

Beijing is also looking warily at January’s presidential elections in Taiwan, which are likely to return the independence-leaning opposition Democratic Progressive Party to power.

Beijing says it will never countenance an independent Taiwan.

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