Taiwan accuses China of risk to global health over WHO ban

AFP  |  Taipei 

accused today of endangering the health of Taiwanese people and compromising global epidemic prevention by blocking it from the Health Organization (WHO), as its hopes of attending a major meeting next month dim.

China, which sees self-governing democratic as part of its territory awaiting reunification, has used its clout to diminish the island's presence on the stage since Beijing-sceptic Tsai Ing-wen took power in May 2016. has yet to receive an invitation to the WHA assembly in next month.

The island's foreign ministry accused Thursday of having a "secret arrangement" with WHO granting power to veto its attendance even at smaller technical briefings.

Out of the 154 WHO briefings applied for between 2009 and 2017, only 46 were approved, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

It also said had delayed timely notification of health information to

"The unilateral arrangement between and the WHO not only poses a threat to the health of the Taiwanese people, but it also causes a loophole in global epidemic prevention," it said.

The comments came in response to a Wednesday statement from China's Affairs Office (TAO), which said Taiwanese experts were free to attend WHO conferences aside from the WHA and were still receiving timely information on disease prevention.

The foreign ministry said the TAO statement was "untrue." AFP has not yet received a response from the WHO.

Despite intensified lobbying efforts this year, Taiwan's foreign ministry said earlier this week it was not optimistic it would receive an invite to the May 21-26 WHA meeting.

"WHO faces a lot of pressure and we are all very clear where that pressure comes from," said Michael Hsu, handling Taiwan's participation in international organisations.

sees May 7 as the last date for it to receive an invitation, which is the

Last year the WHO said there was no basis to invite because the "cross-strait understanding" of previous years no longer existed.

A number of Taiwan's diplomatic allies have written to the WHO urging the island's admittance while US senators this month called on the to develop a strategy to help regain "observer" status.

was expelled from the WHO in 1972, a year after losing the "China" seat at the to

In 2009, was invited to attend as an "observer" under the name "Chinese Taipei" under former Beijing-friendly

But the island has once again been sidelined since Tsai took the presidency.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 26 2018. 11:40 IST