Democracy Taiwan's 'best gift' to China: Ma

Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou, pictured here on January 15, said this month's presidential vote was the island's "best gift" to China, hailing the potential for the poll to show the path to democracy on the mainland

Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou said this month's presidential vote was the island's "best gift" to China, hailing the potential for the poll to show the path to democracy on the mainland. Ma has said hundreds of millions of people in mainland China watched Taiwan's presidential candidates debate live on television last month for the first time through the Internet. The poll, which saw Ma re-elected, could inspire Chinese democracy supporters, he said in a statement released by the Presidential Office. "The peaceful election, a sign of democracy taking roots and bear fruits on the soil of a Chinese community, will make them feel that this will also happen on the mainland," the statement said. "I believe this is the best gift from us to the mainland." He added that the January 14 vote will demonstrate to the mainland that "headcount is the best way to solve differences between the two sides". Ma, of the China-friendly Kuomintang party, retained his post after four years of policies that have seen the most dramatic thaw in the island's ties with China since the two sides split more than six decades ago. China and Taiwan have been governed separately since the end of a civil war in 1949, but Beijing still claims sovereignty over the island, and has vowed to get it back, by war if necessary.