Taiwan says WHO membership means it should be allowed to attend all meetings

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Taiwan's Foreign Minister Joseph Wu speaks during the Ketagalan forum in Taipei, Taiwan August 8, 2023. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins

Mr Joseph Wu said the WHO director-general should take the initiative to invite Taiwan to attend the WHO World Health Assembly (WHA) summit as an observer.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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TAIPEI - Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu called on the World Health Organisation (WHO) on May 15 to allow the island to attend all its meetings if it is serious about its goal of “Health for All”, ahead of a key summit Taipei wants to take part in

Taiwan is excluded from most international organisations because of objections by China, which considers the democratically governed island its own territory.

Taiwan attended WHO’s World Health Assembly (WHA) as an observer from 2009 to 2016 under the administration of then President Ma Ying-jeou, who signed landmark trade and tourism pacts with China.

But Beijing began blocking Taiwan’s participation in 2017 after President Tsai Ing-wen won office due to her refusal to agree to China’s position that both China and Taiwan are part of “one China”.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office on May 13 said it was the Taiwan ruling party’s fault that the island could not attend the WHA, given what it called a “lack of a political basis”.

Taiwan’s government says Beijing has no right to speak for or represent Taiwan on the international stage.

Speaking to lawmakers in Parliament, Mr Wu said the WHO director-general should take the initiative to invite Taiwan to attend May’s WHA summit as an observer.

The WHO should also let Taiwan “fully participate in all the WHO’s meetings, activities and systems, to put into effect the WHO’s charter that health is a basic human right and achieve at an early date the ‘Health for All’ goal”, he added.

He separately told reporters that Taiwan faced a “very high level of difficulty” in taking part in 2024’s WHA, but said it was winning more and more support from countries for its bid to be invited in 2024.

The WHO said in an emailed statement that Taiwan’s observer status at the WHA is a question for the WHO’s 194 member states to consider and decide upon.

“Irrespective of governance questions, WHO attaches importance to its ongoing technical work with Taiwanese health experts. The WHO Secretariat facilitates the involvement of Taiwanese experts in WHO technical activities,” it added.

Earlier in May, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the

United States "strongly encourages" the WHO to reinstate Taiwan's invitation.

The WHA starts on May 27, just a week after Taiwan president-elect Lai Ching-te takes office.

China has a strong dislike of Mr Lai, who it believes is a “dangerous separatist” and has rebuffed his repeated calls for talks.

Taiwan, which is allowed to attend some technical WHO meetings, says its exclusion hindered efforts to fight the Covid-19 pandemic. REUTERS

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