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Taiwan's Attempt to Participate in WHA Again Turned down
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2003-05-19
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The 56th World Health Assembly (WHA) decided on
Monday to turn down a proposal to invite Taiwan to
participate in the assembly as an observer, and agreed not
to list the issue on the agenda of the WHA's week-long
meeting.
Similar proposals have been rejected
by the WHA for seven consecutive years since 1997. The
Taiwan authority tried this year to use severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic to realize its
political ambition, but failed once again.
Speaking at the General Council meeting
and the opening plenary session of the WHA, Chinese
Vice-Premier and Health Minister Wu Yi elaborated the
principle and stand of the Chinese government on Taiwan
issue, and voiced resolute opposition to the issue to be
listed on the WHA agenda.
At this
moment when China and the whole world are battling the SARS
epidemic, a handful of countries tabled a proposal inviting
Taiwan to participate in the WHA as an observer with no
respect to the United Nations Charter and the previous
decisions made by the WHA in the past six years, Wu said.
She briefed the delegates the exchange
and cooperation between the two sides across the Taiwan
Strait in the field of public health in the past few years.
The central government of China is
extremely concerned about the SARS outbreak on both sides
across the strait, adding that a series of measures have
been taken to strengthen information exchange and technical
cooperation in this regard, Wu noted.
"We have on many occasions stated
our willingness to extend to Taiwan all possible help and
hold discussions with Taiwan about a joint strategy to fight
SARS," she said.
Health agencies
on the Chinese mainland have shared with their Taiwan
counterparts related information and prevention and
treatment techniques on SARS. Both sides have also held
symposiums and tele-conference on SARS in the past few
months.
Wu said that the China Center
of Disease Control and Prevention has also provided test
reagent to relevant disease control agencies in Taiwan.
She said that the central government
has allowed the World Health Organization (WHO) to send
experts to Taiwan for SARS inspection, and given green light
to Taiwan medical experts to attend the international
conference on SARS in June this year.
The Chinese vice-premier also
reiterated that WHO is a special UN agency that only
sovereign states can join. Taiwan, as a province of China,
has no qualification to participate in WHO activities in any
manner or to attend the WHA meeting in any name.
WHA is the annual conference of the
192-member WHO and this year's assembly is held on May
19-28. SARS containment, health problems in postwar Iraq,
tobacco control and children's health are on the top of the
meeting's agenda.
On May 15, Zhang
Qiyue, spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said
that China strongly objected any attempt by the Taiwan
authority to participate in the WHA in the name of SARS.
(Xinhua News Agency May 20, 2003)
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