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Play fair, let Taiwan have a bat in the
UN
By Jean Wu
Saturday, Sep 18, 2010, Page 8
ˇĄThis would be akin to having a team from, letˇ¦s say Los Angeles, play under
the title ˇ§British Washington.ˇ¨ˇ¦
At the end of last month, I traveled to Williamsport in Pennsylvania to cheer on
the Little League baseball team from Kaohsiung in the finals against Japan. It
was an exciting extra-inning game in which the 11 and 12-year-olds from Taiwan
battled it out against their counterparts from Japan.
At least in Williamsport, the team from Taiwan was able to play, albeit under
the anachronistic ˇ§Chinese Taipeiˇ¨ title. This would be akin to having a team
from, letˇ¦s say Los Angeles, play under the title ˇ§British Washington.ˇ¨ How
silly can you get, but this is the game played by the grown-ups in the
international community.
That brings me to the main issue to be discussed here: Taiwanˇ¦s exclusion from
international organizations. This has been an unfair and unjust fact of life
since the 1970s, when the UN accepted Chinaˇ¦s membership, and ˇX with UN
Resolution 2758 ˇX kicked out ˇ§the representatives of Chiang Kai-shek (˝±¤¶ĄŰ).ˇ¨
The reason was the decades-long competition between the Chinese Nationalist
Party (KMT) and Chinese Communist Party to represent ˇ§China.ˇ¨ The Chinese Civil
War had ended in 1949 with a Communist victory, but the Nationalists ˇX who had
been driven out of China and occupied Taiwan ˇX had continued their forlorn
claim, which led to Taiwanˇ¦s isolation in the international community.
However, through hard work and perseverance in the 1980s and early 1990s,
Taiwanese were able to engineer the countryˇ¦s transformation into a democracy.
To use a baseball analogy: The old and worn-out pitcher has disappeared, and a
potent young pitcher has emerged, ready to rock the field and show the world
what heˇ¦s got.
However, after much sweating and tireless practice at the bullpen, he finds out
that he has been barred from the game, not because he doesnˇ¦t have the
technique, but solely because one of the other players ˇX a bully ˇX had a fight
with the old pitcher, and thus pressures the whole team to boycott him.
Taiwan deserves to be in the game, just like the other players in the global
baseball game. The question is: How do we make that happen? Certainly not by
giving in to the bully; that will only make the bully more aggressive and intent
to make everyone else play by his rules.
We also wonˇ¦t make it happen if we try to sneak in through the back door. This
seems to be the approach of the administration of President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E),
who ˇX for the first time since 1993 ˇX in 2008 stopped asking Taiwanˇ¦s allies in
the UN to make the case for Taiwanese membership in the global body. Ma has also
pushed for a fuzzy ˇ§meaningful participationˇ¨ in specialized agencies, such as
the World Health Assembly and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
The best and most principled way is for the international community to stand by
the basic principles which are enshrined in the UN Charter ˇX freedom, democracy
and self-determination ˇX and let Taiwan in through the front door and be a full
and equal member. Only then we can really play ball.
Jean Wu is a graduate in diplomacy and international relations
from Seton Hall University in New Jersey. She works at the Formosan Association
for Public Affairs in Washington.
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