Affichage des articles dont le libellé est World Health Assembly. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est World Health Assembly. Afficher tous les articles

dimanche 21 mai 2017

Chinese Aggressions

Shut Out of U.N. Forum, Taiwan Slams China's 'Coercion and Threats'
By Tom Miles

Chen Shih-chung Taiwan's Minister of Health and Welfare gestures during an interview with Reuters ahead of the World Health Assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva, Switzerland May 20, 2017. 

GENEVA -- Taiwan hopes its allies will stand up to China's "coercion and threats" that have shut it out of the U.N.'s annual World Health Assembly (WHA), Taiwanese Health Minister Chen Shih-chung told Reuters on Saturday.
Thousands of delegates from the World Health Organization's 194 members will attend the Geneva meeting this week, but Chen's delegation and Taiwanese media are barred from entry.
"I have to call on China to realize the traditional wisdom of Chinese culture, which is that people are won over by goodwill instead of coercion and threats. That is how a big country should present itself to the world," Chen said.
China views democratic Taiwan as a renegade province to be retaken with the use of force if necessary, and says other countries and international organizations should not recognize or treat it as a separate country.
Taiwan is not a member of the United Nations, which recognizes the "one China" policy centered on Beijing, and it never formally takes part in U.N. meetings.
Since 2009 it has been given observer status at the WHA with Beijing's acquiescence. 
But President Tsai Ing-wen has angered Beijing by refusing to recognize the "1992 consensus", as the previous China-friendly Nationalist government did.
The "1992 consensus" acknowledges Taiwan and China are part of a single China but allows both to interpret who is the ruler.
WHO chief Margaret Chan, a Chinese national whose replacement will be elected on Tuesday, has the right to invite Taiwan as an observer.
"I’m not very willing to focus criticism on an individual and I believe she must be under great pressure but I believe that as the most important leader of the WHO she should be able to make judgments and uphold the principle of global health," Chen said.
Chan's successor will be one of three candidates -- from Pakistan, Ethiopia or Britain.
"Our expectations are high and we believe that the next candidate will do better and we will give them our full support," Chen said. 
"You can’t afford to exclude 23 million people from the global health network."
Taiwan wants to be at the WHA to share its experience in national health insurance, disease prevention, and know-how in areas such as hepatitis-C treatment, AIDS, organ transplants, and craniofacial treatment, Chen said.
The WHO is also the global coordinator of responses to disease outbreaks such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which hit Asia in 2002.
"After the SARS pandemic Taiwanese people are highly concerned with the incomplete disease prevention system and the untransparent information channels of mainland China," Chen said.
Taiwan contributes to the system, Chen said, having shared information on a mutating strain of bird flu imported from China earlier this year.
"We don’t know when things will get worse, therefore the first to see this trend has to report in time so that the world will have better and faster action in developing vaccines and medicines."
Exclusion from the WHA follows a similar refusal from the U.N. aviation agency's conference in Canada last September.
"I believe that the continuation of such incidents will only show that some parties of the world care more about politics and their own desires than about basic human rights," Chen said.
He said he would be willing to take any opportunity to meet and make contact with health officials from mainland China.
"It is a must for all countries to cooperate with each other on the health of their citizens. And I also believe it is the responsibility of the world to make sure that Taiwan is not excluded from the global health system."

vendredi 5 mai 2017

China Is Trying to Bar Taiwan From the World's Top Health Summit. The Consequences Could Be Deadly

By Nicola Smith / Taipei

Taipei has threatened to gate-crash the World Health Assembly’s annual meeting in Geneva this month, after a raucous Chinese protest saw the Taiwanese delegation humiliatingly ejected from an international diamond congress in Australia on Monday.
Australia has complained to the Chinese ambassador about an “extraordinary” disruption to the Kimberley Process conference's opening ceremony in Perth, which saw China’s delegates grab a microphone and loudly protest Taiwan’s presence in the room.
The outburst was described as “disgusting” by an Australian official, but Taiwan was still sent home. The incident fits a growing pattern of attempts by Beijing, which views Taiwan as a renegade province, to squeeze Taipei out of the international arena.
Taiwan is now bracing for another blow if it does not receive an official invitation to the World Health Assembly (WHA), the world’s highest health policy setting body, before the close of registration on Monday.
Health minister, Chen Shih-chung, has pledged to send a delegation to the May 22-31 meeting whether invited or not.
Experts warn that Taiwan’s exclusion from the assembly, the decision-making body of the World Health Organisation, creates a “dangerous” public health risk for East Asia and beyond.
“It’s health apartheid,” charges Lo Chih-cheng, a legislator with the ruling Democratic Progressive Party. 
“Disease knows no borders and what happens in other countries clearly impacts on Taiwan and the other way round. It’s a lose-lose situation,” he argues.
“Taiwan is the only country to have been left out from this international health community…the reason for the exclusion is purely a political objection on the part of Beijing,” Lo says.
The WHO has been silent over whether Taiwan will retain the “observer” status to the WHA that it has been granted every year since 2009, allowing it to participate in the global fight against pandemics and disease. 
Inquiries from TIME to the body’s Geneva secretariat have gone unanswered.
Taiwan’s President Tsai has been forced down the unconventional route of using Twitter and YouTube to lobby for her country’s attendance.
“Taiwan should not be excluded from WHA this year for any reason. Health issues don’t stop at border and Taiwan’s role is impt to global health,” she wrote as one of an unusual splurge of eight tweets on this issue this week.
“Taiwan provides medical assistance to millions of patients around the world,” she said on Wednesday, linking to an emotive two minute YouTube video showing images of Taiwanese doctors providing humanitarian medical assistance in Africa, with the sign-off “WHO cares, TAIWAN cares.”
In an interview with Reuters last week Tsai said Taiwan’s ability to attend the WHA would be a key indicator of the development of cross-Taiwan Strait relations, and urged China to avoid counterproductive policies.
China’s efforts to pressure foreign governments to renounce diplomatic recognition of Taiwan have intensified over Tsai’s refusal to publicly endorse Beijing’s view that the self-governed island and the mainland are part of a single Chinese nation.
But for Dr Wang Pi-sheng, secretary general of the Taiwan Medical Association, the country’s participation in the WHA is not a question of politics, but of practical and medical common sense.
Taiwan’s health system is considered to be world-class — even a global leader in some specializations like cardiac arrhythmia and liver transplants.
“We want to share our resources and information,” Dr Wang tells TIME.
But including Taiwan in global health plans is also a question of public safety, he argues.
“It’s about the epidemic protection network. We don’t want any gap from this network because now we have some new viral epidemic diseases,” he says.
“If we are absent you will have a so-called critical gap.”
The regular wearing of face-masks on Taiwanese streets is an outward sign that the public’s memory is still scarred by a 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome [SARS], which killed 37 in Taiwan, as well as 349 in China and 299 in Hong Kong.
Many Taiwanese felt abandoned by the international community at the time.
“We asked for help from the WHO and they denied us because we were not a member, or even an observer,” claims Wang.
He later added that the WHO sent two officials after four requests from Taipei, claiming it had taken the WHO two months to do so and that the officials refused to meet with Taiwan's health minister. 
The WHO did not respond to the allegation that they had denied assistance.
It’s not the first time that China puts politics ahead of the public good,” says Michael Cole, a Taipei-based political analyst, of the current situation with the WHA.
If you create a blindspot by excluding Taiwan from all of these organizations, it puts lives at risk, not only in Taiwan but in China, regionally and globally because germs and communicable diseases do not care one iota about China’s claims over Taiwan,” he says.
On Thursday, Canada became the latest country to support Taiwan’s bid to attend WHA talks this month, after Senator Peter Harder said that a “Taiwanese absence would be detrimental to global interests.”
James Moriarty, chairman of the American Institute in Taiwan — the de facto U.S. embassy as there are no formal diplomatic ties — also recently backed Taiwanese participation, according to local media reports.
Activists like Michael Tsai, a former defense minister and head of the Taiwan United Nations Alliance lobby group, argue that there should be no preconditions for joining a non-political international body.
“We appeal to international opinion, in good will, to help Taiwan join the WHO,” he says.
“I really hope that many nations help the Taiwanese people to have their voices heard.”