From the CBC:
“Barring Taiwan from WHO is a
serious health concern, Canada, U.S., and allies say”
Canada, the United States and six
major allies have told the World Health Organization (WHO) that its ongoing
exclusion of Taiwan has created a serious public health concern during the
COVID-19 crisis. That sharp message was delivered in a letter, a draft of which
has been viewed by The Canadian Press, that tells WHO director general Dr.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreysus to allow Taiwan to be given observer status at a
major meeting of the organization on Monday. Geneva-based diplomats from
Canada, Australia, France, Germany, New Zealand, Britain, Japan and the U.S.
issued the demand orally in a May 7 meeting with two other senior WHO
officials, with the envoys from Washington and Tokyo taking the lead. Canadian
health officials also took part Friday in a videoconference that was hosted by
Taiwan's Ministry of Health and Welfare, said a senior government official, who
was not authorized to speak publicly about the issue due to its sensitivity. Support
for Taiwan is controversial because China vigorously opposes granting any such
access. It views Taiwan as a breakaway province and wants the world to heed its
"one-China policy." Canada backs U.S.-led campaign for Taiwan to get
observer status at WHO over China's objections
Letter: Taiwan's isolation a
public health concern: While Canada
does not recognize Taiwan's sovereignty, it does maintain trade and cultural
relations, and Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne has said
the island's presence as a non-state observer at this week's meetings would
help the pandemic fight. The draft of the letter delivers a sharp explanation
of that point: it says Taiwan's early success at controlling the pandemic
qualifies it for a seat at the World Health Assembly meetings, and the letter
essentially tells the agency to stop playing politics. "Taiwan's isolation
from the global health community not only presents a serious public health
concern, but also is an obstacle that hampers ongoing and future efforts,"
letter states. The letter also says the international community is
"harmed" when important health information is not permitted to
"flow freely and easily." The letter calls Taiwan a capable and
responsible player in the world's health community, and says it has scientific
and technical expertise "that could help save lives around the
world." The letter says it was "regrettable" that the WHO broke
with its guiding principles by excluding Taiwan from the assembly. It defines
the WHO's guiding principle as ensuring that "all people" have a
right to the highest health standards, regardless of political belief, race,
religion or economic or social conditions.
Move politically sensitive amid
Canada-China dispute: Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau spoke Friday with his British counterpart Boris Johnson and they
discussed their work together in "various international organizations, and
committed to continuing to work together on shared priorities such as combating
climate change and promoting democratic values," according to the Prime
Minister's Office. The WHO has faced accusations from U.S. President Donald
Trump and Canada's Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer that it is too cozy with
China, and that the People's Republic was not forthcoming to the international
health agency as the pandemic was breaking out in Wuhan earlier this year. The
move is politically sensitive for Canada because it is mired in a dispute with
China over what Canada calls the "arbitrary" imprisonment of Michael
Kovrig and Michael Spavor. Despite co-operation on health and trade since the
pandemic's outbreak, relations between Canada and China have been severely strained
since the RCMP arrested Chinese high-tech scion Meng Wanzhou on an American
extradition warrant in December 2018. China arrested Kovrig and Spavor nine
days later in what is widely viewed as retaliation and has levelled accusations
that the former diplomat and the entrepreneur were engaged in actions
undermining China's national security. Canada has marshalled a broad coalition
of international support calling for their release and that has angered Chinese
leaders.
Message in letter echoed in new
report: The message in the letter to the WHO is echoed
a new report released this past week by the U.S.-China Economic and Security
Review Commission, an agency of Congress that advises on the national security
implications of trade with China. It says Taiwan's continued exclusion from the
WHO is "jeopardizing global health." The report noted the WHO ignored
Taiwan's early requests for information about the pandemic, which it said
created "critical delays" in how other countries responded. "The
spread of the virus to 185 countries — with more than four million confirmed
cases and 286,000 deaths worldwide as of May 12 — demonstrates the deadly
ramifications of China's influence over the WHO for the international
community's pandemic preparedness," says the U.S. report. "Had the
WHO allowed Taiwan's health experts to share information and best practices in
early January, governments around the world could have had more complete
information on which to base their public health policies."
Beijing continues to oppose
Taiwan's inclusion: As of Tuesday,
Taiwan had 440 confirmed cases of COVID-19, a "stunningly low" number
in a population of 23.6 million, the report said. Adam Austen, a spokesperson
for Champagne, reiterated Canada's support for "Taiwan's meaningful
participation in international multilateral fora where its presence provides
important contributions to the public good." Canada has "clearly
communicated" to the WHO that Taiwan should be allowed to take part in the
upcoming World Health Assembly meetings, said Austin. "We continue to
encourage the WHO to engage with experts from Taiwan and to support Taiwan's
meaningful inclusion in global discussions on health." The spokesperson
for China's foreign ministry once again registered Beijing's strong objections
on Friday to including Taiwan at the WHO, calling it an attempt to "seek
independence under the pretext of the pandemic with the help of some Western
countries." Spokesman Zhao Lijian said the "few countries" that
are backing Taiwan "are only aiming to politicize the health issue to seek
selfish political gains," according to a translation of his remarks on his
ministry's website. He said that would only result in "hijacking the WHA
and undermining global anti-pandemic co-operation."
^ The WHO should not allow itself
to become a puppet of China and should accept Taiwan. Health care, viruses,
pandemics, etc. know no political borders or disputes and to ignore and exclude
Taiwan the World Health Organization is playing into China’s hand rather than
being an international organization that wants to make the world a healthier
place. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/barring-taiwan-from-who-is-a-serious-health-concern-canada-and-allies-say-1.5573865
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