This story is from May 18, 2020

Pompeo says Taiwan exclusion 'further damages' WHO credibility

US secretary of state Mike Pompeo condemned the WHO's delay on whether to include Taiwan, saying it proved US charges that the UN body was beholden to China. The WHO delayed discussion on whether to grant observer status to Taiwan, which Beijing considers a province awaiting reunification and seeks to exclude from all international organizations.
Pompeo says Taiwan exclusion 'further damages' WHO credibility
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks during a daily coronavirus briefing in the White House in Washington. File photo used for representation. (NYT)
WASHINGTON: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday condemned the World Health Organization's delay on whether to include Taiwan, saying it proved US charges that the UN body was beholden to China.
The WHO member states at their annual meeting delayed discussion on whether to grant observer status to Taiwan, which Beijing considers a province awaiting reunification and seeks to exclude from all international organizations.

Pompeo said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has been harshly criticized by President Donald Trump's administration, "had every legal power and precedent" to include Taiwan in the meeting.
"Yet he instead chose not to invite Taiwan under pressure from the People's Republic of China," Pompeo said in a statement.
"The Director-General's lack of independence deprives the Assembly of Taiwan's renowned scientific expertise on pandemic disease, and further damages the WHO's credibility and effectiveness at a time when the world needs it the most."
Taiwan has enjoyed remarkable success in combatting the pandemic, with only seven deaths and some 400 infections despite its proximity and close commercial links with mainland China, where the disease was first identified.

Trump has accused the WHO of not sounding an alarm early enough and of blindly taking China's word after the virus was identified late last year in Wuhan.
Critics say that Trump, who himself had earlier praised China's response, is trying to divert attention from his own handling of the pandemic in the United States, which has suffered by far the highest death toll.
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