Four more chartered cargo flights have been booked 
from Taiwan direct to the Chinese mainland after the first such flight landed at 
Shanghai early on Thursday, a Taiwan airline has announced. 
The flights are scheduled to touch down in Shanghai on July 25, July 30, 
August 8 and August 10, said a source with the Shanghai office of the China 
Airlines, Taiwan's largest air carrier. 
 
 
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    Airport workers unload 
 cargo from the plane.Taiwan's first non-stop cargo charter flight lands at 
 Shanghai's Pudong International Airport early Thursday morning. Flight CI 
 6901 of Taiwan-based China Airlines took off from Taoyuan Airport in 
 Taipei at 10 pm, carrying Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company 
 equipment. [Xinhua]  
 
  
  | 
They will carry a total of 400 tons of 
manufacturing equipment for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd (TSMC) 
for its new eight-inch chip plant in Shanghai. 
A Boeing 747-400 from Taiwan landed at Shanghai Pudong International Airport 
at 00:33 a.m. Thursday after a journey of two hours and 13 minutes, bringing 61 
tons of equipment for TSMC, and making history as the first direct chartered 
cargo flight since 1949. 
"The non-stop flight reduced our costs by a quarter," Kuoliang Tung, chief 
representative of China Airlines' Shanghai office, told Xinhua. 
The aircraft departed Taipei at around 22:20 p.m. Wednesday, and set off on 
the return leg at 3:20 a.m. Thursday. 
The next four flights will operate the same departure times. 
The flight was the result of the negotiations held a month ago between civil 
aviation associations on both sides of the Taiwan Straits. 
Under an agreement reached on June 14, carriers will be allowed to transport 
equipment used by Taiwan-funded plants on the mainland. 
The agreement also approved three more chartered passenger flight programs 
during traditional Chinese festivals in addition to the Spring Festival flights 
launched in 2003. 
Another source said the first chartered passenger flight for the traditional 
Mid-Autumn Festival could be launched in late September or early October, and 
air carriers on both sides would submit applications to the authorities in 
mid-August. 
"We are expecting regular cargo and passenger flights, which will greatly 
benefit usiness people and improve communications across the straits," said Chen 
Luyi, vice president of the Shanghai-based Taiwanese Business Association. 
Direct links have become a pressing issue in cross-Straits exchanges with the 
development of economic and trade relations between the two sides. 
The mainland has been pushing for the two-way "three direct links" in mail, 
transport and trade, and refuting political concerns of the Taiwan authorities 
over the issue.