EDITORIAL: Mr Ma, do
you take us for fools?
With steely-eyed determination and a clenched fist held up high, a stern-faced
President Ma Ying-jeou (°¨^¤E) on Tuesday asserted his intention to safeguard
Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty and dignity as he slammed the WHO for addressing Taiwan as
a ¡§Province of China¡¨ in an internal memo, and held China responsible for
pressuring the WHO into designating Taiwan as part of China.
Just before the public was swept away by Ma¡¦s rhetoric and convinced of his will
to stand up against China and anyone who stomps on Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty and
dignity, however, an event that took place on the same day on the other side of
the Taiwan Strait led people to wonder whether Ma was at all sincere at the
press conference.
It is ironic that as Ma spoke in Taipei about protecting the nation¡¦s dominion
and dignity and singled out China as the culprit suppressing Taiwan¡¦s
international standing, the Chinese Nationalist Party¡¦s (KMT) honorary chairman
Wu Poh-hsiung (§d§B¶¯) was sharing the stage with Chinese President Hu Jintao (JÀAÀÜ)
in Beijing, with the latter speaking of China¡¦s ambition to unify Taiwan.
If Ma is at all serious about safeguarding the nation¡¦s standing, wouldn¡¦t the
Hu-Wu meeting have provided the perfect platform for Wu to voice Taiwan¡¦s
protest?
Ma, who doubles as KMT chairman, could very well have instructed Wu to seize the
opportunity and showed the Ma administration¡¦s resolve in defending the nation¡¦s
name and dignity.
Instead, Hu was left to trumpet his message of unification, saying that
¡§commercial and cultural exchanges can serve as two bridges for cross-strait
hand-in-hand and mind-to-mind cooperation.¡¨
Hu also stressed that both the KMT and the Chinese Communist Party had to uphold
the so-called ¡§1992 consensus that adheres to the one China principle¡¨ ¡X all
without a squeak of opposition from Wu.
It is no wonder then that Taiwanese are left guessing whether Ma¡¦s performance
on Tuesday was simply more political theater aimed at fooling the public.
The disclosure of the WHO memo, which said WHO publications needed to use the
terminology ¡§Taiwan Province of China¡¨ and that Taiwan should be ¡§listed or
shown as falling under China and not separately as if they referred to a state,¡¨
brings to mind Taiwanese student Huang Hai-ning (¶À®ü¹ç) and her fellow protesters
confronting then-Department of Health minister Yeh Ching-chuan (¸ª÷¤t) over his
dubious representation of Taiwan at the World Health Assembly (WHA) in Geneva in
2009.
It would appear that their concerns have proven well-founded.
Many vividly recall that Yeh, in response to the protesters¡¦ question, visibly
lost his composure and abandoned all civility as he launched into a tirade,
pointed a finger at Huang and said: ¡§Shame on you¡¨ and ¡§People like you are
useless.¡¨
At the time, Yeh dodged that simple question posed by Huang and her fellow
protesters. Two years later, the answer has been laid bare for all to see ¡X that
Taiwan¡¦s status has indeed been belittled by the international organization.
Who are the ones who should really be shamed for allowing Taiwan and Taiwanese
to endure such an insult? Without need for hesitation, the public knows the
answer.
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