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A child looks at a mask at a market in Taipei on Thursday. The Chinese island province said it would produce at least 200,000 doses of a new vaccine against the strain of swine flu virus.(Chinadaily/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese mainland
official said here Thursday that resolving the issue of Taiwan's participation
in the World Health Assembly (WHA) showed sincerity and goodwill from the
mainland.
A spokesman from the State Council
Taiwan Affairs Office told Xinhua that allowing Taiwan's participation in the
WHA indicated that the mainland attached great importance to the health of
Taiwan people.
The spokesman said it also demonstrated sincerity in
pushing forward the peaceful development of cross-Straits relations.
The Ministry of Health confirmed Wednesday that the
World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Margaret Chan had invited the
Department of Health, Chinese Taipei, to attend, as an observer, the assembly
that is scheduled from May 18 to 27.
The spokesman confirmed that the invitation had been
accepted.
The WHA is the supreme decision-making body for the
WHO. It is usually attended by delegates from all 193 members each May in
Geneva.
The spokesman said the mainland and Taiwan had
recently exchanged views and consultation on Taiwan's participation in the WHA.
In 2005, the Communist Party of China (CPC) and
Taiwan's Kuomintang party released a joint document proposing to discuss
Taiwan's participation in international activities after efforts to resume
cross-Straits dialogue, in which Taiwan's involvement in WHO activities was a
priority.
On Dec. 31, at a high-level seminar commemorating the
30th anniversary of the publication of the mainland's "Message to Compatriots in
Taiwan," Hu Jintao, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, offered
proposals to promote the peaceful development of cross-Straits relations.
Hu said the mainland was willing to discuss with
Taiwan "proper and reasonable arrangements" for Taiwan's participation in the
activities of international organizations, so long as such activities would not
create any scenario of "two Chinas" or "one China and one Taiwan."
Cross-Straits relations had embraced a "hard-won"
opportunity since last year, the spokesman said, adding: "The two sides have
properly settled Taiwan's participation in the WHA through down-to-earth
consultations in line with the spirit of building mutual trust, laying aside
disputes, seeking consensus and shelving differences, and jointly creating a
win-win situation."