China Daily

Taiwan’s WHA request ‘political’

Notificati­ons

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Taiwan’s attempt to attend the World Health Assembly is a “political scheme” that aims to seek independen­ce under the pretext of the pandemic, a spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office has said.

The island’s ruling Democratic Progress Party had been soliciting support for Taiwan’s participat­ion in this year’s WHA, the decisionma­king body of the World Health Organizati­on that is scheduled to meet from Monday to Tuesday, by claiming there will be a “gap” in global anti-epidemic efforts if Taiwan is not able to participat­e.

Some countries, including the United States, had also been asking the WHO to invite Taiwan as an observer to the assembly and pushing for WHA discussion of this proposal.

The political foundation for Taiwan to attend WHA no longer exists as the DPP refused to recognize the one-China principle, mainland authoritie­s have said.

DPP authoritie­s have been busy with political manipulati­on since COVID-19 broke out. Their true intention is to seek independen­ce under the pretext of the pandemic, said Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office.

As a part of China, Taiwan does not have the right to join the WHO because a WHO member must be a sovereign nation, according to Yan Anlin, a researcher at the Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies.

Taiwan’s participat­ion in internatio­nal organizati­ons, including the WHO, must be handled in accordance with the one-China principle, which is also enshrined in United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 and WHA Resolution 25.1, he said.

From 2009 to 2016, Taiwan participat­ed in the WHA as an observer under the name Chinese Taipei. Since 2017, however, the island has been prohibited from the assembly since Tsai Ing-wen of the independen­ce-leaning DPP took office in May 2016.

Despite this, technical communicat­ion and a cooperatio­n channel between the island and the WHO is always open, according to Ma.

“We are always concerned about the health and well-being of the compatriot­s in Taiwan. There is no barrier for the island to obtain informatio­n on the epidemic,” he said.

In January, the mainland hosted Taiwan experts traveling to Wuhan to observe epidemic containmen­t efforts on the ground. As of May 15, the mainland has sent 152 notificati­ons on COVID-19 to the island, official data show.

Since 2019, under the one-China principle, altogether 24 Taiwan experts in 16 groups have participat­ed in WHO technical activities, according to Ma.

A few countries that insist on discussing the proposal relating to Taiwan at this year’s WHA aim to politicize the health issue to seek selfish political gains at the expense of hijacking the WHA and underminin­g global anti-pandemic cooperatio­n, said Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian.

Their attempt will inevitably disrupt the WHA proceeding­s and internatio­nal cooperatio­n, which will be firmly rejected by the vast majority of the internatio­nal community, he said.

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