MTAC Gets The Boot From Cabinet
(The Taipei Times | March 4, 2002)
TRIMMING THE FAT: As part of the government's downsizing plans,
the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission will be scrapped,
though some of its functions will likely be continued elsewhere.
The Executive Yuan has reached an internal consensus to scrap
the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission as part of the
government's downsizing plan, the Chinese-language Liberty Times
reported yesterday.
The news came one month after the Cabinet's revision of a bylaw
effectively excluding Outer Mongolia from ROC territory.
A consensus was reached at a meeting on government reforms on
Saturday to reduce the number of ministries and councils to between
20 and 23, down from the current 36, according to the report.
The new government reforms will not start until May 2004.
A total of three proposals were submitted at the meeting, all
of which include plans to abolish the Mongolian and Tibetan
commission. The proposals also recommend that the commission's
operations be merged into the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the
Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) or an ad hoc task force under the
Presidential Office.
The commission's chairman, Hsu Chih-hsiung, told reporters that
some of the commission's operations are still of value even though
its current size is "neither necessary nor practical." The key
question now is how to downsize the commission and merge it with
another government agency, Hsu said.
Hsu recommended merging it with the MAC and creating a
"Mainland, Mongolian and Tibetan affairs commission."
Another option considered earlier was to merge it with the Hakka
and Aboriginal affairs commissions and create an "ethnic affairs commission."
However, the option became void after President Chen Shui-bian
declared that the Hakka and Aboriginal commissions would remain intact.
On Jan. 31, the Cabinet approved an MAC-proposed amendment to the
Statutes Governing Relations between the People on Both Sides of
the Taiwan Strait formally excluding Mongolia from the
"Mainland China Area."
The amendment will allow the government to view Mongolians as
foreigners and issue visas to them as such.
Whether Mongolia, better known in Taiwan as "Outer Mongolia,"
is part of the ROC has been a long-running debate in Taiwan even
though Mongolia declared independence from China in 1911.
The KMT government did not recognize the country until 1946.
Under pressure from the Allied countries around the end of World War II,
the KMT government signed a treaty with the Soviet Union in August 1945.
In the treaty, the KMT government agreed to recognize Mongolia's
independence if a plebiscite confirmed the Mongolian people's desire
for such.
Mongolia held a referendum in October that year and the electorate
overwhelmingly voted for independence from China. The KMT government
recognized Mongolia's independence in January 1946.
However, after losing the Chinese civil war to the Communists and
fleeing to Taiwan in 1949, the KMT regime back tracked on recognizing
the Sino-Soviet treaty in addition to Mongolia's independence.
The Chinese Communist Party recognized Ulan Bator's independence soon
after taking power in 1949.
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