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Murti Transindo bertekad untuk dapat menjadi yang terbaik dibidang jasa kirim barang tujuan Jakarta-Batam. Dan sekarang ketika kita memasuki milenium baru dan era teknologi informasi kini Murti  Transindo hadir ditengah-tengah anda guna untuk memberikan layanan terbaik untuk dapat mencapai kesuksesan bersama . Untuk itu kami tidak hanya memberikan layanan yang efesien,tetapi menawarkan harga yg kompetitif . Kehandalan , kecep atan  dan kerja team adalah bahan-bahan untuk sukses dalam bidang logistik kontes melawan waktu . Peralatan inovatif,qualitas yg luar biasa adalah dasar untuk kesuksesan ini. Ambisi kita yg paling penting adalah untuk memenuhi permintaan pelanggan. baik dalam mengembangkan layanan baru serta mengembangkan lebih lanjut akan pentingnya menjalin kemitraan yg baik kepada setiap pelanggan.

 

JASA PENGIRIMAN BARANG JAKARTA

BEIJING (AP) — The head of Taiwan's Nationalists reaffirmed the party's support for eventual unification with the mainland when he met Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping as part of continuing rapprochement between the former bitter enemies.

Nationalist Party Chairman Eric Chu, a likely presidential candidate next year, also affirmed Taiwan's desire to join the proposed Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank during the meeting in Beijing. China claims Taiwan as its own territory and doesn't want the island to join using a name that might imply it is an independent country.

Chu's comments during his meeting with Xi were carried live on Hong Kong-based broadcaster Phoenix Television.

The Nationalists were driven to Taiwan by Mao Zedong's Communists during the Chinese civil war in 1949, leading to decades of hostility between the sides. Chu, who took over as party leader in January, is the third Nationalist chairman to visit the mainland and the first since 2009.

Relations between the communist-ruled mainland and the self-governing democratic island of Taiwan began to warm in the 1990s, partly out of their common opposition to Taiwan's formal independence from China, a position advocated by the island's Democratic Progressive Party.

Despite increasingly close economic ties, the prospect of political unification has grown increasingly unpopular on Taiwan, especially with younger voters. Opposition to the Nationalists' pro-China policies was seen as a driver behind heavy local electoral defeats for the party last year that led to Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou resigning as party chairman.

Taiwan party leader affirms eventual reunion with China

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