Zhang Zhijun, minister of Beijing's Taiwan Affairs Office, reached the island's main airport just before noon today to speak privately with his government counterpart. He sidestepped scores of anti-China protesters to enter a nearby hotel for the talks.
China and Taiwan have been separately ruled since the Chinese civil war of the 1940s. China sees the island as part of its territory that eventually must be reunified by force if necessary despite a Taiwanese public largely wary of the notion of Chinese rule.
Dialogue opened that year as Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou agreed to put off political issues to build trust and improve the island's economy through tie-ups with China's much larger one.
The two sides have signed 21 deals, last year lifting two-way trade to USD 124.4 billion and bringing in about 3 million mainland tourists, who were once all but banned.
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But in March, hundreds of student-led protesters forcibly occupied parliament in Taipei to stop ratification of a two-way service trade liberalisation pact.
"Zhang wants to show to the world, Taiwan and the mainland included, that the two sides are moving closer in spite of the Sunflower Movement earlier this year," says Leonard Chu, a China studies professor retired from National Chengchi University in Taipei.
The Chinese official and his Taiwan counterpart Wang Yu-chi are expected to discuss future rounds of import tariff cuts and establishing consular-style offices helpful to investors and tourists.
Taiwan says it will make no announcements during the visit, which Beijing describes as a chance for its minister to understand the island better.