Leaked cables cast
doubt on president¡¦s WHA claims
By Shih Hsiu-chuan / Staff Reporter
Leaked US cables cast doubt on statements made by President Ma Ying-jeou¡¦s (°¨^¤E)
administration that Taiwan¡¦s presence at the World Health Assembly (WHA) was a
result of direct communication with the WHO and that Taiwan¡¦s designation as
¡§Chinese Taipei¡¨ was acceptable and did not infringe on Taiwanese sovereignty.
Instead, the cables released by WikiLeaks suggest Beijing¡¦s heavy involvement in
the matter, with its insistence that Taiwan¡¦s international participation be
based on the ¡§one China¡¨ principle.
For three consecutive years since 2009, Taiwan has taken part in the annual WHA
meeting as an observer under the name ¡§Chinese Taipei.¡¨ While Ma¡¦s government
has hailed the participation in the WHA as a major diplomatic achievement, it
has been clouded by accusations that it has eroded Taiwan¡¦s sovereignty.
Recent evidence came in May following the leak of an internal memo from the WHO,
in which it said Taiwan is a ¡§province of China¡¨ pursuant to an agreement the
WHO signed with Beijing. The Ma administration sent a letter of protest in May,
but to date the WHO has yet to respond.
US cables released by WikiLeaks recently provide more insight into what it took
for Taiwan to be able to take part in WHA meetings.
In a confidential cable dated Dec. 24, 2008, the US embassy in Beijing quoted
Taiwan Affairs Office Director Wang Yi (¤ý¼Ý) as saying that ¡§Taiwan¡¦s
international space, particularly [its] participation in the WHA, should be
worked out on the basis of the ¡¥one China¡¦ principle and through direct
consultations between the Mainland and Taiwan.¡¨
Wang was quoted in the cable as saying that Taiwan¡¦s attendance at the WHA must
rely on ¡§cross-strait consultation¡¨ to find the ¡§most suitable arrangement.¡¨
Earlier the same year, Wang told visiting US academics on Oct. 31 that WHO
Director-General Margaret Chan (³¯¶¾´I¬Ã) could invite Taiwan to ¡§participate¡¨ in
the WHA meeting, but this would not give Taiwan ¡§legal observer¡¨ status,
according to a cable dated Dec. 5, 2008.
¡§Any progress that could be made on the WHO/WHA issue by next May in the absence
of direct negotiations between China and Taiwan would be something short of
formal observership,¡¨ the same cable quoted Chinese officials as saying.
In another cable dated March 24, 2009, the US embassy in Beijing said that its
contacts were unanimous in predicting that there would be ¡§a new arrangement¡¨
allowing Taiwan to participate in the WHA in May after Wang said in a CCTV
interview on March 11 that he was ¡§cautiously optimistic¡¨ about Taiwan¡¦s
participation in the UN agency because both sides now agreed to ¡§oppose Taiwan
independence¡¨ and uphold the ¡§[19]92 consensus.¡¨
Despite the fact that the WHA issue had not been put on the table in
cross-strait negotiations shortly after Ma took office in May 2008, several
cables issued by the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT) showed that many Chinese
Nationalist Party (KMT) figures brought up the subject with Chinese officials.
According to a cable dated Dec. 24, 2008, then-KMT vice chairman and Legislator
John Chiang (½±§µÄY) told the AIT that former vice president and KMT chairman Lien
Chan (³s¾Ô) had raised the WHO issue in his meeting with Chinese President Hu
Jintao (JÀAÀÜ) at the APEC meeting in November in Peru.
Lien was then Ma¡¦s envoy to the APEC summit.
Hu responded by suggesting ¡§Taiwan send someone to talk to PRC [People¡¦s
Republic of China] officials¡¨ and pointed to the KMT-Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
forum, the cable said, also quoting Chiang as offering AIT officers a readout of
a recording of the Dec. 20-21 KMT-CCP forum in Shanghai.
Chiang also told the AIT that he had discussed the issue with Wang at the forum
and he was confident that Taiwan would be able to attend the WHA meeting in May
2009 in some ¡§mutually acceptable status,¡¨ the cable showed.
Meanwhile, a cable dated Dec. 22, 2008, showed that the AIT noted that Ma tried
to ¡§lower public expectations¡¨ about the country¡¦s participation in the WHA when
he gave an interview with the Washington Post on Dec. 9, in which he said that
¡§Taiwan just wanted to attend the WHA meeting. We are not asking for anything
more.¡¨
¡§This seemed a step back from Ma¡¦s May statement that his goal was to secure WHO
observer status under an appropriate name,¡¨ the AIT said in the cable.
Another AIT cable dated May 8, 2009, showed that then-AIT director Stephen Young
was told by Ma on May 7 that Taiwan plans to focus on participation in WHA and
WHO activities for the present and not to push to join other international
organizations.
Taiwan will proceed cautiously because Beijing is worried the WHA observership
breakthrough could produce a domino effect, the AIT said in the cable.
During the meeting, Ma attributed Taiwan¡¦s success in joining the WHA to three
factors. First, domestic efforts by the Democratic Progressive Party and past
health ministers; second, senior KMT leaders, including Lien and former KMT
chairman Wu Po-hsiung (§d§B¶¯), who mentioned the issue to Hu; and third,
international support from the US, EU, Japan and others, the cable said.
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