Bangkok Post

WHO invite ‘hard to get’, official says

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TAIPEI: It will be “very difficult” for Taiwan to get an invite to a major World Health Organizati­on meeting this month, but efforts are continuing, Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said yesterday.

Taiwan is excluded from most global organisati­ons because of objections from China, which considers it one of its provinces and not a separate country. In particular, Taipei has complained that exclusion from the WHO has hampered efforts to fight the Covid-19 pandemic.

Taiwan attended the World Health Assembly, the WHO’s decision-making body, as an observer from 2009–2016 when Taipei-Beijing relations warmed. But China blocked further participat­ion after the election of Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen, who China views as a separatist — a charge she rejects.

Taking lawmaker questions in parliament, Mr Wu said they were continuing to seek an invite.

“The difficulty is very high, but we are still proactivel­y striving for it,” he added.

While China has signalled it would not approve an invite for Taiwan this year, the democratic­ally governed island has won strong support from Western allies to be allowed in.

The US House of Representa­tives last month unanimousl­y passed legislatio­n calling on the State Department to submit a plan to help Taiwan regain its observer status.

Taiwan’s Deputy Health Minister Lee Li-feng is leading a delegation to Geneva, where she hopes to have meetings with other health ministers on the sidelines and press Taiwan’s case for participat­ion, Mr Wu said.

Taiwan Health Minister Chen Shihchung will stay to oversee the fight against a surge in Covid-19 cases at home, with some 290,000 infections reported since the start of the year, though most of those have had either no or light symptoms.

 ?? ?? Wu: Dealing with Beijing opposition
Wu: Dealing with Beijing opposition

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