《TAIPEI TIMES》 Fifteen allies back WHA observer status
Minister of Health and Welfare Chen Shih-chung, center, yesterday poses with demonstrators after he held a news conference on the sidelines of the World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland. Photo: AFP
SPEAKING OUT: Canada and New Zealand for the first time gave their backing for Taiwan’s participation, while Germany, Honduras and Japan also spoke up
By Lu Yi-hsuan / Staff reporter, in GENEVA, Switzerland, with CNA
Fifteen of Taiwan’s diplomatic allies have voiced support for its attendance at this year’s World Health Assembly (WHA) as an observer, the WHO said yesterday as it opened the first meeting of the 71st WHA in Geneva, Switzerland.
Proposals for a supplementary agenda item “inviting Taiwan to participate in the WHA as an observer” were received last month and earlier this month from Belize, Tuvalu, Nauru, eSwatini, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, El Salvador, Saint Christopher and Nevis, Nicaragua, Paraguay, the Solomon Islands, Burkina Faso, Haiti, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Saint Lucia, the WHO said in a statement.
The proposal has been submitted to the WHA’s General Committee for review, it said.
If the assembly decides to discuss the proposal, it would issue documents related to it, the statement said.
The proposals are listed in the form of direct quotes and do not represent the opinions of the WHO Secretariat, a note to the statement said, adding that the WHO addresses Taiwan as “Taiwan, China.”
Representatives from Germany, Honduras and Japan yesterday voiced support for Taiwan to have observer status during their speeches to the assembly as well as, for the first time ever, Canada and New Zealand.
Taipei Cultural and Economic Delegation Geneva Office Director-General Bob Chen (陳龍錦) said proposals would be discussed in two-against-two debates, and that four of Taiwan’s allies have agreed to speak for it.
While eSwatini and the Solomon Islands would lobby at the General Committee for Taiwan’s participation, the Marshall Islands and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines would put forward a motion to debate Taiwan’s participation if the committee vetoes the proposal, Chen said.
Taiwan in 1997 began to seek an invitation to the WHA’s annual meetings and was finally invited as an observer in 2009, under the former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) administration. It received invitations through 2016.
However, Beijing blocked such invites last year and again this year to show its displeasure with the Democratic Progressive Party administration of President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文).
新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES
Delegates attend the World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, yesterday. Photo: AFP
A copy of a WHO proposal for a supplementary agenda item inviting Taiwan to participate in the WHA as an observer is pictured yesterday. Photo: CNA, screen grab from the Internet
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Fisher becomes cultural ambassador of Nanfangao
上一則新聞:《TAIPEI TIMES》 ‘Good friends’ at AIT dedication
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 MAC slams partial lifting of China ban
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 PLA incursions continue despite KMT trip: DPP
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Mayday to perform in Hualien following earthquake
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Researcher warns Taiwanese about visiting China
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》New Alishan train to be launched next month
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Plagiarism raised over exam question
-
《TAIPEI TIMES》 Heineken announces NT$13.5 billion investment in a brewery in Taiwan
焦點今日熱門