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The agreement also includes measures for greater cooperation on food safety. The deal allows faster recalls of unsafe products and better exchange of information. The drastic warming in relations began after Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou was elected in March, pledging to ease military tensions and forge closer economic ties with China. Ma's predecessor, Chen Shui-bian, was vilified and shunned by Beijing because he leaned toward independence. His eight years in office were also marred by policy blunders and corruption. China has repeatedly warned that Taiwan has two choices: eventual unification or a devastating attack. Ma's Nationalist Party has long supported eventual unification with China, a policy that has helped the new president win Beijing's trust. But Ma himself has promised not to pursue unification talks or move the island toward independence.
[Associated
Press;
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