Each year, Taiwan spends more than US$44 million on providing technical and medical assistance around the globe. As of December 2006, Taiwan had stationed 34 technical missions which carried out 84 cooperation projects in 29 countries. Taiwanese medical teams are currently stationed in Burkina Faso, and São Tomé and Príncipe. In 2006 alone, Taiwan dispatched its mobile medical missions to 12 countries, including countries without diplomatic ties like Papua New Guinea and Fiji. Taiwan’s vibrant NGO sector has also made substantial contributions to the same end.
In the aftermath of the severe earthquake that hit Indonesia and the deadly tsunami that devastated neighboring countries, including Thailand, the Maldives, the Seychelles Islands and even Madagascar, the government of Taiwan donated US$50 million to assist the affected countries with their relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction work. Taiwan’s private sector also collected donations worth more than US$150 million. Besides, only 2 days after a powerful magnitude 8 earthquake struck the Republic of Peru on Aug. 15 2007, the government of Taiwan also donated US$100,000 for disaster relief.
In addition, Taiwan has at times sent disease prevention teams abroad in collaboration with international humanitarian relief efforts. Its team for post-tsunami relief in South Asia is an example. Taiwan is also engaged in several international disease prevention and control projects, including an operational plan for malaria control in São Tomé and Príncipe, the establishment of Asia's largest flavivirus study center in Taiwan to fight Dengue Fever/DHF outbreaks, and HIV/AIDS control projects in Chad, Malawi and Haiti. Most recently, Taiwan has sent a team of five experts to São Tomé and Príncipe to help fight cholera. Without doubt, Taiwan is more than willing to participate in and contribute to global disease prevention and control efforts.
Taiwan will continue to promote bilateral and multilateral health cooperation projects to demonstrate to the international community that it is willing and able to contribute to international health cooperation, and to global disease prevention and control networks. Among other things, Taiwan has established Taiwan International Health Action (TaiwanIHA) in 2006 to integrate its professional expertise, facilities and funding with a view to assisting the development of the medical and health care infrastructure in developing countries, and to providing more humanitarian and medical relief assistance to countries in need. For example, after learning a severe earthquake hit the Republic of Peru on 15 August, 2007, TaiwanIHA immediately organized a medical relief team and arrived in Peru on Aug. 17. Taiwan’s team was the first foreign medical group to arrive in Pisco, the hardest hit city of Peru.
In addition to its bid for WHO membership, Taiwan strives for meaningful participation in the WHO, including attending more WHO technical meetings in a dignified and systematic manner. Taiwan also seeks to establish partnership with the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN) and other international disease prevention and control mechanisms, and to participate in the IHR 2005 mechanism in an appropriate capacity.
"Disease recognizes no borders." Certainly, the world cannot afford to allow a gap in the global disease prevention and control network. As the threat of avian influenza attracts serious attention in the international community, it is becoming more imperative and more urgent than ever to formally incorporate Taiwan into the WHO system. Taiwan's participation in the WHO is not only necessary for the protection of the health rights of the 23 million people in Taiwan, but also for the completeness of the global disease prevention and control mechanisms. This is not a political issue, but an issue concerning human rights, humanity and health.