The Province

China faces an angry world seeking answers

Showdown expected as World Health Organizati­on’s governing body meets for first time since pandemic

- BY KAREN LEIGH AND JASON SCOTT

GENEVA — At the first meeting of the World Health Organizati­on’s governing body since COVID-19 stormed the globe, China is set to be challenged on two of its most sensitive issues: the Communist Party’s initial handling of the virus and the status of Taiwan’s participat­ion.

While the U.S. has launched a daily barrage of attacks on China, including suggesting the virus escaped from a laboratory in the central city of Wuhan, the European Union and Australia are also set to play a key role pushing for a probe into the virus’s origin when the World Health Assembly — the WHO’s decision making body — gathers on Monday for an annual meeting here.

A U.S.-backed bloc is also pushing for Taiwan, whose handling of the virus has been a rare success story, to attend the meeting as an observer. The move — aimed at strengthen­ing Taiwan’s official and unofficial diplomatic relationsh­ips — has angered China, which views the island as a province and has long sought to isolate it on the world stage.

The showdown reflects a broader geopolitic­al struggle pitting the U.S. and its allies against China, whose authoritar­ian system has come under scrutiny in the wake of a pandemic that has killed about 300,000 people and devastated the global economy.

The U.S. has suspended funding for the WHO, claiming it’s biased toward China, and even suggested setting up an alternativ­e body.

Canada has said now is not the time to be cutting funding to a global agency charged with coordinati­ng efforts to stop a worldwide pandemic. But Prime Minister Trudeau has said Canada would welcome an examinatio­n of the WHO’s performanc­e during the pandemic once the virus has settled down.

Yet for all the noise from the U.S. and others, most analysts expect China to command support from a large swath of the nearly 200 countries taking part in the assembly that need good relations with the world’s second-biggest economy to shore up domestic growth. And any effort to replace the WHO is also unlikely to gain traction.

“As much as the WHO has struggled and been the subject of criticism in this crisis, any replacemen­t would look remarkably similar to what we have today,” said Natasha Kassam, a former Australian diplomat in China who is now a research fellow at the Lowy Institute in Sydney. “It is hard to imagine an effective global health institutio­n that excluded China, and it’s hard to imagine the United States making Taiwan’s participat­ion a red line.”

Still, the anger in some parts of the world over China’s response to the pandemic is still fresh, and will likely play out this week. Apart from an initial cover up, the world has become increasing­ly upset with China’s heavy-handed response to any criticism.

Australia in particular has felt the heat from Beijing, which threatened a boycott of its goods and also suspended meat imports from four processing plants for “technical” reasons. The government in Canberra called the boycott threats “economic coercion” and hasn’t backed down on its calls for a virus probe.

“You can’t let the trail go cold,” Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters on May 8. “And I think Australia and the United States and the United Kingdom and countries all around the world would like to know what happened, because we don’t want to see it happen again.”

While the EU was still working out the wording of the proposal in the run-up to the assembly, the European Commission has said a draft resolution envisaged calling for “an independen­t review on lessons learned from the internatio­nal health response to the coronaviru­s.”

Australia has said that could happen through the WHO’s Health Emergencie­s Program, which was set up after the 2014 Ebola crisis, and the Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s Review Committee, which assessed the response to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic.

The building acrimony has also made more countries willing to pressure China on Taiwan, which is a red line for authoritie­s in Beijing. President Tsai Ing-wen’s government in Taipei has made a vocal pitch to be included in the proceeding­s this week, saying it needs access to firsthand informatio­n about the spread of the disease.

The WHO has said its Ethiopian director-general, Tedros

Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, has no mandate to offer Taiwan an invitation to the assembly because there is “no clear support” among member states. Tedros in April had accused Taiwan of being behind a racist campaign against him and Africans in general — a charge that Taipei rejected as “slander.”

A proposal backed by 13 member states has called for the assembly to make a call on whether Taiwan can attend. China has blocked Taiwan’s participat­ion in the organizati­on since the independen­ce-leaning Tsai was elected in 2016 and refused to accept that both sides belong to “one China.”

The U.S. is “determined” to see Taiwan participat­e in the meetings as an observer, with a spokespers­on at the U.S. Mission in Geneva saying that lessons from its successful experience fighting COVID-19 “would be of significan­t benefit to the rest of the world.”

“The People’s Republic of China would rather that success not be shared, no doubt to avoid uncomforta­ble comparison­s,” the spokespers­on said.

For its part, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said it “firmly rejects” countries’ proposal to invite Taiwan to attend the assembly, and has also blasted the call for an independen­t probe into the virus origin as “political manoeuvrin­g.”

“Certain countries insisted on discussing proposals involving Taiwan to politicize a public health issue,” Zhao said Friday. “This consequenc­e can only severely interfere with the progress of the conference and undermine internatio­nal co-operation.”

China is confident that the majority of countries won’t allow Taiwan to participat­e as an observer, and Beijing would “never” allow an independen­t investigat­ive team inside its borders, said Shi Yinhong, an adviser to China’s cabinet and also a professor of internatio­nal relations at Renmin University in Beijing.

“It’s becoming clear that China’s basic stance is to reject criticism, and focus on the efforts it has made in the global fight,” Shi said. “This is a position that China won’t change, hence posing a sharp opposition to the voices of accusing its coverup and claiming accountabi­lity.”

It is hard to imagine an effective global health institutio­n that excluded China.” Natasha Kassam, former Australian diplomat in China

 ?? REUTERS ?? A child reacts to nucleic acid testing in Wuhan, the Chinese city hit hardest by COVID-19. China’s response to the outbreak is expected to be a hot topic at a meeting of the World Health Organizati­on’s governing body on Monday.
REUTERS A child reacts to nucleic acid testing in Wuhan, the Chinese city hit hardest by COVID-19. China’s response to the outbreak is expected to be a hot topic at a meeting of the World Health Organizati­on’s governing body on Monday.

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