China Blocks Taiwan's Participation in World Health Assembly 2025

China has announced it will not approve Taiwan's participation in the 79th World Health Assembly in Geneva. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun reiterated the One-China principle, stating Taiwan has no right to attend without Beijing's approval. Taiwan has not been invited to the WHA for the 10th consecutive year since 2016. Taiwan's Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung is reportedly planning a visit to Geneva for related events.

Key Points: China Blocks Taiwan from World Health Assembly

  • China denies Taiwan participation in 79th WHA
  • Cites One-China principle and UN resolutions
  • Taiwan not invited for 10th consecutive year
  • Taiwan's Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung plans Geneva visit
  • DPP separatist stance blamed by China
3 min read

China says it won't allow Taiwan to participate in World Health Assembly

China refuses Taiwan's participation in the 79th World Health Assembly, citing the One-China principle. Taiwan's Foreign Minister plans Geneva visit.

"China's Taiwan region, unless given approval by the Central Government, has no basis, reason or right to participate in the WHA. - Guo Jiakun"

Beijing, May 12

China has announced that it will not approve Taiwan's participation in the 79th World Health Assembly set to be held in Geneva from May 18-23.

Addressing a regular press conference in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun reiterated the country's stance that Taiwan is an "inalienable" part of China and the Government of the People's Republic of China is the sole legal government representing the whole of China. Guo stated that Taiwan's participation in the activities of international organisations, including the WHO, must be handled in line with the 'One-China' principle.

"There is but one China in the world. Taiwan is an inalienable part of China's territory. The Government of the People's Republic of China is the sole legal government representing the whole of China. China's position on the Taiwan region's participation in the activities of international organizations, including the WHO, is consistent and clear. That is, this must be handled in line with the one-China principle, which is also a fundamental principle recognized by UNGA Resolution 2758 and WHA Resolution 25.1," said Jiakun when asked about Taiwan not receiving an invitation to attend the 79th World Health Assembly.

"China's Taiwan region, unless given approval by the Central Government, has no basis, reason or right to participate in the WHA. Due to the DPP authorities' persistent separatist stance, the political foundation for the Taiwan region to participate in the WHA no longer exists. To uphold the one-China principle as well as the sanctity and authority of relevant UNGA and WHA resolutions, China has decided not to approve the Taiwan region's participation in this year's WHA. Any attempt to play the 'Taiwan card' for political manipulation in defiance of the one-China principle is doomed to fail," he added.

China maintains that Taiwan is a part of its territory and needs to be reunified with the mainland, by force if necessary. Despite China's efforts, Taiwan, backed by strong public support, continues to assert its sovereignty and responds to China's incursions.

Despite not receiving invitation to the WHA for the 10th consecutive year, Taiwan's Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung has said that he is trying to arrange a visit to Geneva to attend events Taiwan is organising to coincide with the annual World Health Assembly, the Central News Agency (CNA) reported.

When asked whether he would visit Geneva to be part of a team advocating Taiwan's inclusion in the World Health Assembly, Lin Chia-lung told opposition Kuomintang (KMT) lawmaker Yeh Yuan-chih that his ministry was drafting such a plan, without sharing further details.

When asked about the issue again during a press event, Lin did not share details and said that ministry would announce the visit if the plan is finalised.

The World Health Assembly is the annual decision-making meeting of the WHO and Taiwan has not participated in it since 2016, when it went as an observer while ties with China were better.

Taiwan has held events in Geneva, where the WHO is headquartered and the WHA is held, to coincide with the WHA. However, no Taiwanese Foreign Minister has ever visited Geneva or participated in the Taiwan's WHA action team events, CNA reported.

Taiwan and Switzerland do not share official diplomatic ties, making it unlikely that Lin Chia-lung would be permitted to visit Geneva in an official capacity, reports cited.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
But shouldn't health be above politics? WHO's mandate is about global health security, not territorial disputes. Denying Taiwan participation means millions of people's health concerns might not be properly addressed. This feels like using people's wellbeing as a bargaining chip.
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Priya S
As an Indian, I understand the sensitivity around territorial integrity. But China's approach here seems overly rigid. Taiwan has a functioning healthcare system that contributed greatly during COVID. They should be allowed observer status at least. The world needs cooperation, not exclusion.
M
Michael C
Interesting how China invokes UN Resolution 2758 but conveniently ignores that it only addresses representation, not sovereignty claims. Anyway, this is just another example of China using its muscle to bully smaller entities. Health should be a basic right for everyone, regardless of political disputes.
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Vikram M
Look, I get the One China principle. Every country has its red lines. But WHO membership is about saving lives, not scoring political points. Taiwan was an observer until 2016 - why not continue that? The DPP's stance is problematic, but punishing 23 million people seems excessive. Need a middle path.
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Emma D
The hypocrisy is staggering. China talks about "inalienable parts" while Dalai Lama's Tibet remains occupied. And Taiwan is a separate country in practice if not in name. The WHO should invite Taiwan regardless - international law doesn't give China veto power over global health governance.

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