US criticizes WHO for ignoring Taiwan virus
warnings
April 10, 2020
WASHINGTON,
United States — The United States on Thursday accused the World Health
Organization of putting politics first by ignoring early coronavirus warnings
by Taiwan, which voiced outrage over criticism from the UN body's chief.
President Donald Trump has gone on an offensive with threats to
withhold funding for the WHO, which is at the forefront of fighting the
pandemic that has infected more than 1.5 million people worldwide since
emerging in Wuhan, China late last year.
Critics say that Trump's sudden threats against the WHO amount
to a political ploy to find a foreign scapegoat as he comes under fire for not
doing more to prepare for and control COVID-19, which has killed about 15,000
people in the United States.
Trump himself said in January that the United States had the
coronavirus "totally under control" and predicted it may go away in
April as temperatures rise.
Elaborating on Trump's case against the WHO, the State
Department said the WHO was too late in sounding the alarm over COVID-19 and
overly deferential to China. It questioned why the Geneva-based body did not
pursue a lead from Taiwan.
The United States is "deeply disturbed that Taiwan's
information was withheld from the global health community, as reflected in the
WHO's January 14, 2020 statement that there was no indication of human-to-human
transmission," a State Department spokesperson said.
"The WHO once again chose politics over public
health," she said, criticizing the WHO for denying Taiwan even observer
status since 2016.
The WHO's actions have "cost time and lives," the
spokesperson said.
Taiwan, which has succeeded in limiting the virus to just five
deaths despite the island's proximity and ties with China, warned the WHO on
December 31 of human-to-human transmission, Vice President Chen Chien-Jen has
said.
Chen, an epidemiologist, told the Financial Times that Taiwanese
doctors had learned that colleagues in Wuhan were falling ill but that the WHO
did not work to confirm the finding.
China considers Taiwan — a self-ruling democracy where the
mainland's defeated nationalists fled in 1949 -- to be a province awaiting
reunification and has sought to exclude it from all international
organizations.
Taiwan decries
'slander'
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, in an
appeal Wednesday for unity, said that he had been subjected to insults
including racial slights since the public health crisis began.
The Ethiopian doctor turned diplomat did not mention the United
States -- the largest donor to the WHO at more than $400 million last year --
but singled out non-member Taiwan.
"Three months ago, this attack came from Taiwan,"
Tedros told reporters in Geneva, referring to online criticism and insults.
"Taiwan, the foreign ministry also, they know the campaign.
They didn't disassociate themselves. They even started criticizing me in the
middle of all that insult and slur, but I didn't care," Tedros said.
The comments sparked anger in Taiwan, which described Tedros'
comments as "baseless" and said it was seeking an apology for
"slander."
"Our country has never encouraged the public to launch
personal attacks against him or made any racially discriminatory
comments," foreign ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou told reporters on Thursday.
In a Facebook post, President Tsai Ing-wen invited Tedros to
visit Taiwan and learn from its handling of the epidemic, challenging him to
"resist pressure from China."
"We have been blocked from international organizations for
many long years and we know what it feels like to be discriminated against and
isolated more than anyone else," she said.
Beijing responded that Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party,
which emphasizes Taiwan's separate identity, has engaged in "political
manipulation" over the WHO.
"Its true aim is to seek independence through the pandemic.
We are firmly opposed to this, and their scheme will never succeed," a
foreign ministry spokesman said in Beijing.
Critics of Tedros have accused the WHO under his leadership of
being too close to Beijing and complimentary of China's response to the
coronavirus.
But some public health experts say that the WHO had little
choice but to cooperate with China to preserve access in Wuhan. — with
Amber Wang in Taipei
.
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