China Daily Global Edition (USA)

WHO hailed for rejecting proposal on Taiwan

WHO unveils ambitious targets to benefit 3 billion people before 2023

- By CHINA DAILY Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Beijing said on Tuesday that rejecting a Taiwan-related proposal in the World Health Assembly has proved that the one-China principle is widely accepted by the world and represents an irresistib­le trend.

The proposal to invite Taiwan to be an observer to the 71st assembly, suggested as a supplement­ary agenda item, was refused on Monday. The WHA is the decision-making body of the World Health Organizati­on.

An Fengshan, spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, said on Tuesday that China praises the WHO’s dealing with Taiwan-related issues according to the one-China principle as stipulated in resolution­s of the UN General Assembly and WHA.

China welcomes such a “clear-cut” decision, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said at a daily news conference.

He said the Chinese government will properly handle Taiwan’s participat­ion in internatio­nal events in accordance with the one-China principle.

The annual assembly, from Monday to Saturday in Geneva, is expected to unveil a plan aiming to benefit 3 billion people worldwide with better healthcare over the next five years.

Nearly 4,000 delegates from the WHO’s 194 member states and partner organizati­ons are attending the assembly.

Experts said Taiwan’s current Democratic Progressiv­e Party administra­tion should be held responsibl­e for the island’s absence from the ongoing assembly.

Chu Shin-min, a professor at Chengchi University’s department of diplomacy in Taipei, said at a news conference on Monday that the key to Taiwan’s participat­ion in internatio­nal organizati­ons is recognitio­n of the 1992 Consensus, which embodies the one-China principle but has been rejected by the DPP administra­tion.

The DPP administra­tion is deceiving itself, as peaceful and stable cross-Straits relations are the foundation for Taiwan’s participat­ion, Chu said.

From 2009 to 2016, Taiwan participat­ed in the WHA under observer status as “Chinese Taipei”, but has not been invited since 2017, when the DPP came to power.

Pang Chien-kuo, a professor at Taipei’s Chinese Culture University, said DPP protests over the WHO’s decision to deny Taiwan’s participat­ion were merely cloaks to hide its incompeten­ce and mislead the public.

Chen Yi-hsin, a chaired professor at the Department of Political Science at the university, said the expansion of Taiwan’s internatio­nal space can be achievable only through improving cross-Straits relations.

GENEVA — A senior Chinese health official told an internatio­nal forum that China is willing to cooperate with other countries to reduce “health injustice” and achieve better services for everyone.

Ma Xiaowei, minister of China’s National Health Commission, told the 71st World Health Assembly, which kicked off in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on Monday, that China puts a high priority on the nationwide healthcare network.

He said that China attaches key importance to the establishm­ent of a high-quality and efficient medical and health service system, and makes every effort to make the service affordable.

Also, deepening the reform has become a strong driving force to move the health service forward on a road with Chinese characteri­stics, he said.

“China is actively participat­ing in global health governance and promoting the building of a shared community with a common destiny, as well as helping developing countries to achieve their universal healthcare goals,” said Ma, who is leading the Chinese delegation at the assembly.

According to him, during the past 55 years, China has sent medical teams to 69 developing countries, dispatchin­g 250,000 healthcare profession­als and treating 280 million patients.

The assembly, which will be held until Saturday, has attracted nearly 4,000 delegates from the World Health Organizati­on’s 194 members and partner organizati­ons.

It is the WHO’s highest decision-making body, setting out the organizati­on’s policy and approving its budget.

On Monday, it unveiled an ambitious plan aiming to benefit 3 billion people globally over the next five years with improved healthcare and well-being.

Three priorities

The plan, entitled “13th General Program of Work”, will guide the activities of the WHO from 2019 to 2023.

The plan sets out three strategic priorities to ensure healthy lives and promoting well-being for all ages. It aims to help 1 billion people benefit from universal health coverage, 1 billion more to be better protected from health emergencie­s, and another billion to enjoy better health and well-being.

Though the latest WHO annual report on the state of the world’s health, which was released on Thursday, highlighte­d remarkable progress in pushing forward the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals in some areas, it also warned that progress has stalled and the gains made could easily be lost.

The report underlined that less than half the people in the world today get all of the health services they need; that almost 100 million people were pushed into extreme poverty in 2010 due to health service bills; that 13 million people die every year before the age of 70 from cardiovasc­ular disease, chronic respirator­y disease, diabetes and cancer, mostly in low and middle-income countries; and that every day in 2016, 15,000 children died before reaching their fifth birthday.

“This is unacceptab­le,” said WHO Director-General Doctor Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s. “This is why we are transformi­ng how we work to achieve our vision of a world in which health is a right for all. We are changing the way we do business.”

To fulfill the plan, the WHO has vowed to step up leadership at all levels and increase the impact of better health in every country.

In addition to offering technical support, the UN health agency is advocating health “at the highest political level” at all levels of government­s, and strengthen­ing its public voice for the plan and against any harmful practices, including from industry.

 ??  ?? Ma Xiaowei, minister of China’s National Health Commission
Ma Xiaowei, minister of China’s National Health Commission

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