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China Opposes European Parliament's Taiwan Resolution
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2002-03-19
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BEIJING, March 19 (Xinhuanet) -- The Chinese
government has accused the European Parliament of
interfering in China's internal affairs with its support for
Taiwan's participation in the World Health Organization
(WHO).
Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue made the remarks Tuesday at
a regular press conference.
Zhang said the European
Parliament had passed a resolution on March 14, requiring
the European Union Commission and EU member nations to
support Taiwan's "entry" to the World Health
Organization (WHO) as an observer.
It was widely accepted that
the WHO was a special organ of the United Nations which only
sovereign states had a right to join, Zhang said.
"Taiwan, a province of
China, is not qualified to join it," she said.
The World Health Assembly had
vetoed the so-called resolutions on Taiwan's
"entry" since 1997, and the relevant resolution
had been rejected again by the WHO executive commission this
year, she said.
This
demonstrated that the Chinese government's stance on this
issue had been supported and understood by most of the
international community, she said.
Zhang said the Taiwan issue
was China's internal affair and should be settled by the
Chinese people themselves, and foreign countries had no
right to interfere.
Taiwan's
"entry" to the WHO, for any reason or in any way,
was an infringement of Chinese sovereignty and territorial
integrity, and an interference in China's internal affairs,
she said, adding that China opposed it resolutely.
Zhang said the China-European
Union comprehensive partnership had maintained good momentum
for development, and the European Parliament, an important
organ of the European Union, should observe a one-China
policy.
She urged the European
Parliament to stop disturbing China-European Union relations
to facilitate their development in a long-term, stable and
healthy way. Enditem
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