Off the wire
Chinese mainland reiterates no interference in Taiwan election  • Japan beat Netherlands 2-1 to enter top 8  • Australian Air Force drone flies in civilian airspace for first time  • Mitsubishi ordered in S. Korea to indemnify forced labor victims during WW II  • Heat wave kills 748 people in Pakistan's Karachi  • Nikkei ends at 18-yr high as on hopes for Greek deal  • UN recommends FARC guerrillas and Colombian gov't strike truce  • Urgent: Suicide attack rocks N. Afghan Kasham district, casualties feared  • Quarter-finals schedule of Women's World Cup  • Fiji, Grenada establish diplomatic relations  
You are here:   Home

Mainland will welcome Taiwan's people to V-Day celebrations

Xinhua, June 24, 2015 Adjust font size:

The Chinese mainland welcomes people from all walks of life in Taiwan, including veterans who fought the war and their relatives, to attend the mainland's commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II.

Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, told a press conference that the victory in the Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression was "owned by the entire Chinese nation."

"Both battlefields, behind enemy lines and the front-line, played an important role," Ma said.

People on both sides of the Taiwan Straits should commemorate the victory together, he said, adding that he hopes the two sides respect the memory of revolutionaries who fell in the conflict, remember history, inherit the spirit and safeguard the fruits of the anti-Japanese war and unite to work for the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.

Some Kuomintang (KMT) veterans will take part in a military parade in Tian'anmen Square on Sept. 3, Victory Day, organizers said on Tuesday.

"KMT troops played an important role in the Chinese People's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression," Major-general Qu Rui, one of the parade organizers, said at a press conference.

This will be the first time China has held a parade to commemorate the events at the end of the war.

Japan signed the formal surrender on Sept. 2, 1945, and China celebrated its victory the following day. After the war, KMT forces led by Chiang Kai-shek were defeated in a civil war by the Communist Party of China and fled to Taiwan in 1949. Endit