China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Official: Taiwan can blame itself World Health Assembly exclusion linked to DPP’s political stance

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GENEVA — The head of the Chinese delegation to the 70th World Health Assembly reiterated on Sunday that the one-China principle is a prerequisi­te for the participat­ion of Taiwan.

The World Health Assembly is the decision-making body of the World Health Organizati­on and sets policy for the organizati­on. The meeting is held annually in Geneva, Switzerlan­d.

At a news conference before the opening, Li Bin, head of the delegation, brushed off Taiwan’s claim of an “epidemic prevention gap”, which it used as a pretext for attendance.

In answering Taiwan-related questions, Li, who also heads the National Health and Family Planning Commission, said it is the Taiwan authoritie­s — led by the Democratic Progressiv­e Party — who impeded Taiwan’s attendance at the annual assembly. She reaffirmed the cross-Straits 1992 Consensus, which centers on the one-China principle, as the prerequisi­te for Taiwan’s participat­ion.

The DPP, Li said, “refused to recognize that the two sides of the Taiwan Straits belong to one China. By so doing, it undermined the political basis of cross-Straits relations and brought the cross-Straits contact and communicat­ion mechanism to a standstill”.

As a result, she said, the political basis for Taiwan’s participat­ion in the annual conference of the global health body has ceased to exist.

According to Li, from 2009 to 2016 the central government made special arrangemen­ts for Taiwan to attend the annual assembly as an observer, under the name “Chinese Taipei”, in accordance with the 1992 Consensus reached between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan.

Since winning the local election in Taiwan last year, the DPP’s stand has made it “impossible to carry out any cross-Straits consultati­ons for the special arrangemen­ts anymore”, Li said.

The WHO is a specialize­d agency of the United Nations. UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 and World Health Assembly Resolution 25.1 provide the legal basis for the WHO to follow the one-China principle, Li added.

Li also reiterated the stand of the central government on safeguardi­ng Taiwan’s public health interests.

“The attitude of the central government in addressing thehealthi­ssuesofint­erestto Taiwan compatriot­s is sincere and earnest, and the active measures taken are practical and effective,” she said.

Li said proper arrangemen­ts have been made for Taiwan to participat­e in global health affairs and to conduct exchanges on epidemics and other health issues with WHO medical and public health experts.

Through consultati­ons with the WHO, the central government has also made arrangemen­ts for the applicatio­n of Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s in Taiwan, she said, adding that Taiwan “can access the informatio­n on public health emergencie­s released by the WHO, so the so-called epidemic prevention gap doesn’t exist at all”.

In addition, Li said, there have been cross-Straits deals and exchanges conducted on the basis of the 1992 Consensus in medical and public health fields, including epidemic prevention and treatment, drug safety management, research and the developmen­t of traditiona­l Chinese medicine, among other things.

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