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COMMENTARY Taiwan, a victim of UN
'health apartheid'? By Chen
Tan-sun
Used by permission of Pacific Forum, CSIS
TAIPEI -
The SARS virus, which ravaged the Asia-Pacific last
year, has re-emerged in China. This time, it originated
from one of Beijing's leading laboratories, following
the pattern of two isolated cases in Singapore and
Taiwan last year. However, unlike those previous
incidents, it has already spread outside the laboratory,
necessitating the quarantine of hundreds of people and
tragically causing at least one death.
It is
disturbing to note that although this outbreak occurred
just before the recent visit to Beijing of the director
general of the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr Lee
Jong-wook, the world learned of it only after Dr Lee had
left. One can only hope that this does not indicate a
continuation of the dissembling and obfuscation by the
Chinese health authorities that exacerbated the original
appearance of SARS or severe acute respiratory syndrome.
In response to the latest outbreak, Taiwan has
already taken proactive measures. It has placed its
public health authorities on the first stage of national
alert, which includes screening all incoming airline
passengers. It has issued travel advisories for Beijing
and Anhui province and instituted special monitoring
visits by its researches to medical research
laboratories worldwide.
Should any suspect cases
be discovered, those cases will immediately be
transferred to dedicated treatment facilities that were
established last year, and quarantines and comprehensive
prevention and monitoring will be carried out according
to the regulations laid down by the special
Cabinet-level SARS task force. With these measures in
place, Taiwan is confident that it can prevent the
spread of the virus within its territory.
These
measure are a result of some of the lessons that Taiwan
learned the hard way from its experience last year, when
SARS, also originating from China, caused 73 deaths in
Taiwan and inflicted major disruptions on its health and
transport systems.
One other important lesson is
that Taiwan must also be allowed to participate fully in
the international monitoring and information networks
led by the WHO. Unfortunately, this lesson remains
unlearned.
At the time of the initial SARS
outbreak, the WHO refused Taiwan's requests for
information, and its calls went unanswered during the
crucial first few weeks, during which there was a window
of opportunity to contain the outbreak. Only after the
situation in Taiwan deteriorated dramatically in late
April did the WHO send its first experts to the
territory.
Since then, the situation has not
really improved, despite the passage at last year's
World Health Assembly of Resolution 56.29, which
requires the WHO director general "to respond
appropriately to all requests for WHO support for
surveillance, prevention and control of SARS". Although
Taiwan's Center for Disease Control was allowed to
attend one international SARS conference last June, the
WHO subsequently refused or ignored repeated requests
for participation in related events, such as the
"Consultation on the Composition of Influenza Vaccine
for the Northern Hemisphere" and the "Consultation on
Priority Public Health Interventions Before and During
an Influenza Pandemic" in February and March of this
year, respectively. A request from Taiwan's Department
of Health to provide and have access to information in
the Global Influenza Surveillance Network has remained
unanswered since last August.
Although SARS is
the most pressing issue today, these problems are in
fact only symptomatic of the larger issue of Taiwan's
participation in WHO information networks. In just the
past year, requests for information on the outbreak of
avian influenza in several countries in the region, as
well as that of shigellosis in Indonesia, were similarly
rebuffed.
Indeed, the WHO has begun to
institutionalize this stance with a directive that
contact by any WHO staff with any Taiwanese experts or
organizations requires prior consultation with the WHO
legal counsel. This constitutes a new form of "health
apartheid", where Taiwan is given separate and unequal
treatment. This is not only unfair to the 23 million
people of Taiwan, but it also enforces a gap in the
international monitoring and control of all infectious
diseases.
This year, for the eighth time, Taiwan
is applying for observer status in the World Health
Assembly. The purpose of its application is precisely to
eliminate these procedural and legal obstacles to
information sharing and disease monitoring. This would
fill the gap in the international monitoring network,
not only for SARS, but for all other future disease
outbreaks in the Asia-Pacific region. It would help
protect the health not only of Taiwan's 23 million
people, but of all peoples, not least, the citizens of
the People's Republic of China.
It is time for
the international community to put an end to "health
apartheid" and allow Taiwan an appropriate level of
participation in the WHO.
Chen
Tan-sun is foreign minister of Taiwan. He wrote this
article for Pacific Forum, CSIS, which made
it available.
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