
Pakistan, China oppose motion to invite Taiwan to WHO's annual assembly
GENEVA: Member states of the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Monday rejected a proposal to invite Taiwan to its annual assembly in Geneva.
China, which regards the democratically governed island of Taiwan as its territory, and Pakistan opposed the motion and the assembly accepted Taiwan's exclusion.
Belize and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, who are among just 12 remaining countries with formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, spoke on behalf of a group of countries who brought a proposal to include it as an observer in this year's WHO meeting.
FM Dar arrives in Beijing on 3-day official visit
Saint Vincent described Taiwan's exclusion as 'unfair and self-defeating' and Belize's envoy said it 'weakens our collective preparedness and response capabilities'.
No major Western country spoke for Taiwan or signed the proposal, and the United States, which plans to quit the WHO, left its seat empty.
'The proposal openly challenges the authority of the UN and the post-war international order,' said Chinese Ambassador Chen Xu, who is part of a more than 200-strong Chinese delegation at the meeting.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry statement said Taiwanese authorities' 'separatist' stance has led to the loss of a political foundation for its participation in the assembly. It denied that there was any gap in pandemic preparedness due to Taiwan's exclusion, calling that a 'political lie'.
China vows support to Pakistan for securing peace, stability
Between 2009 and 2016, Taiwan attended WHO assembly sessions as an observer under the administration of then-President Ma Ying-jeou, who signed landmark trade and tourism agreements with China.
The question of its participation recurs annually.
Taiwan is excluded from most international organisations because of objections by China.
A delegation from Taiwan campaigned for its inclusion in this year's WHO assembly and a van has been driving through Geneva with images of bubble tea and the Taipei 101 skyscraper.

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