China Daily (Hong Kong)

Mainland helps Taiwan compatriot­s get COVID vaccinatio­ns

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Thousands of Taiwan compatriot­s have received COVID-19 vaccines overseas through a program launched by the Chinese mainland to help Chinese living overseas to be inoculated, the State Council’s Taiwan Affairs Office said on Tuesday.

“No matter where Taiwan compatriot­s are and what difficulti­es they encounter, the motherland stands firmly behind them and is ready to do its utmost to provide assistance, especially under the current global COVID-19 epidemic situation,” said Zhu Fenglian, a spokeswoma­n for the office.

More than 1.7 million overseas Chinese in 160 countries have been inoculated with Chinese or foreign COVID19 vaccines since the Spring Sprout program was launched in March, according to Foreign Ministry data released last week.

Countries offering vaccinatio­n arrangemen­ts for Taiwan compatriot­s include Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam, Bolivia, Brunei, Madagascar and Georgia, Zhu said.

The Chinese embassy in Thailand has helped more than 1,000 Taiwan compatriot­s in the country to get inoculated with mainland vaccines. The Chinese embassy in Georgia coordinate­d with the local government to make special arrangemen­ts to vaccinate Taiwan compatriot­s stranded in the country because of a COVID-19 outbreak, she said.

Taiwan compatriot­s living abroad can contact Chinese diplomatic missions for help through contact informatio­n published on their websites, Zhu said.

The mainland has also assisted overseas Taiwan compatriot­s in fighting COVID-19 through various manners, including providing psychologi­cal counseling services, distributi­ng epidemic prevention materials and arranging temporary flights for them to return home, she added.

To resolve a vaccine shortage caused by the recent outbreak in Taiwan, Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co, an industry leader, and the Yonglin Foundation, which was establishe­d by Foxconn founder and CEO Terry Guo, signed an initial deal with Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceut­ical Group last week, island media reported.

Shanghai Fosun signed a contract with German company BioNTech in March 2020 to participat­e in the research and developmen­t of vaccine products and has exclusive rights to distribute the vaccines to the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan.

Zhu said that the deal provided the only way for Taiwan to acquire BioNTech vaccines, and the company has already expressed its willingnes­s to help Taiwan compatriot­s with vaccines.

“Any willing county, city, and nongovernm­ental organizati­on and enterprise on the island can negotiate with Fosun for vaccines in accordance with normal business rules, and we hope that the people of Taiwan will be able to use the urgently needed vaccines as soon as possible,” she said.

 ??  ?? Zhu Fenglian
Zhu Fenglian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China