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ARATS, SEF sign deals on regular flights, financial, judicial cooperation
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According to the agreement, the two negotiating bodies will meet on a case-by-case basis regarding suspects who may have broken a law that is considered illegal in one region, but not the other.

Other major crimes listed for the joint crackdown include robbery, hijacking and economic wrongdoing, such as money laundering and falsifying currencies and securities.

The two sides agreed to exchange crime-related information and help each other investigate cases and collect evidence. Each side is also responsible for helping the other to identify witnesses, seize and repatriate criminals and suspects.

The two sides also agreed to provide direct flights or sea transportation to repatriate criminals and suspects under the principles of humanity, security, convenience and speed. Related evidence should also be transferred quickly.

Both sides are responsible to report key information to the other party, such as information on the detention of each other's suspects and details in the event of a non-disease-related death. Each side should also offer convenience for family members to visit such suspects.

The agreement was signed by the mainland-based Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) and the Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) during their talks in Nanjing Sunday.

Mainland, Taiwan clinch financial regulatory mechanism

The Chinese mainland and Taiwan clinched Sunday afternoon a cooperative financial regulatory mechanism to watch banking, securities, futures and insurance sectors across the Taiwan Straits.

The mainland-based Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) President Chen Yunlin and the Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) Chairman Chiang Pin-kung signed the agreement to cooperate with one another in terms of money regulation, accessibility of financial institutions to each other's market, and an arrangement for information exchange for financial regulatory purposes.

The two negotiating parties agreed to offer aid on implementing financial and monetary regulatory responsibilities, expanding wide cooperation in financial areas and jointly safeguarding financial stability.

The two sides assured each other to effectively supervise individual financial and monetary institutions from the opposite party.

The agreement asked regulatory bodies on banking, securities and futures, and insurance in both the Chinese mainland and Taiwan to prepare for detailed arrangements for the agreed-upon cooperation.

The two sides also agreed to encourage commercial banks from both sides to start business on money swaps, supply and reflux, as well as cooperation on cash anti-counterfeiting technology.

Arrangements for cross-Strait monetary clearing would also be built, the agreement said.

The ARATS and the SEF encouraged relative institutions to create conditions for increased cooperation to facilitate the accessibility of each other's market.

Meanwhile, the ARATS and the SEF ensured that the respective financial regulators would provide each other financial and monetary regulatory information and pivotal decisions that regulators deem might have consequences on the other's financial market.

The agreement, however, emphasized that the exchange of financial information would only be used for financial or monetary regulatory purposes in a mutually-assured confidential way.

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