US Slams Beijing and WHO’s Pandemic Response at UN Body’s Annual Meeting

Cathy He
By Cathy He
May 18, 2020US News
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US Slams Beijing and WHO’s Pandemic Response at UN Body’s Annual Meeting
Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar attends the White House Coronavirus Task Force briefing in Washington on April 3, 2020. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The United States decried Beijing’s coverup of the CCP virus outbreak and criticized the World Health Organization’s (WHO) pandemic response at the international body’s annual meeting.

U.S. Health Secretary Alex Azar, at the virtual meeting of the World Health Assembly (WHA) on May 18, denounced an “apparent attempt to conceal this outbreak by at least one member state,” without directly naming to China. The WHA is the WHO’s decision-making body.

He also called out the WHO’s complicity in the virus’s spread, by repeating Chinese talking points.

“We must be frank about one of the primary reasons this outbreak spun out of control,” Azar said. “There was a failure by this organization to obtain the information that the world needed, and that failure cost many lives.”

Earlier in the meeting, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus vowed to launch an “independent evaluation” into how the organization responded to the outbreak “at the earliest appropriate moment.”

Chinese leader Xi Jinping, in a video speech at the opening of the meeting, said the Chinese regime would support a “comprehensive review” of the global response to the pandemic, provided that it is led by WHO.

Azar said the United States supported “an independent review of every aspect of WHO’s response” and that China’s conduct should be “on the table” for a review too.

Separate from talks of the independent review, a resolution drafted by the European Union calling for an independent evaluation of the WHO’s performance appeared to have won consensus backing among the WHO’s 194 states. It was expected to be debated and adopted on Tuesday. The draft motion does not specifically refer to China or Wuhan, the outbreak epicenter, but does call on the body to work with the World Organization for Animal Health to investigate the source of the virus, according to Australian media outlet ABC.

Xi in his remarks sought to emphasize the regime’s efforts in combating the pandemic and pledged $2 billion to the United Nations to help the global response. He also defended the regime’s handling of the outbreak: “All along we have acted with openness and transparency and responsibility.”

Speaking hours after Xi, Azar said the United States had allocated $9 billion to virus containment efforts around the world. The United States, WHO’s largest contributor, last month halted funds to the WHO pending a review, slamming the body as being too deferential to Beijing.

The body has come under intense scrutiny for repeating Chinese official statements that there was little or no risk of human-to-human transmission of the virus during the early stages of the outbreak in China. Mounting evidence, including from leaked internal documents, however, shows that the regime knew about the outbreak’s severity but hid it from the public.

Top WHO officials have also repeatedly praised Chinese officials and claimed China’s response set an example for other countries to follow.

Ghebreyesus defended the body’s response, saying it had “sounded the alarm early, and we sounded it often.”

Earlier Monday, WHO’s seven-member internal oversight body published a report examining the group’s response to COVID-19, saying the WHO “demonstrated leadership” in handling the pandemic between January and April.

“Initial information on case fatality rate, severity, and transmissibility furnished by China in early January reflected an incomplete picture of the virus, but were updated by the WHO Secretariat following a country office mission to Wuhan from 20 to 21 January,” it said.

“An imperfect and evolving understanding is not unusual during the early phase of novel disease emergence.”

Committee members said an independent assessment of WHO’s performance “may be useful” but warned that conducting a review “during the heat of the response, even in a limited manner, could disrupt WHO’s ability to respond effectively.”

Taiwan

At the start of the WHA meeting, member states unanimously agreed to defer a decision on granting observer status to Taiwan until later this year to avoid diverting attention away from the pandemic.

The United States along with a group of countries launched a campaign ahead of the meeting pushing for the self-ruled island’s inclusion, saying its exclusion hampered global efforts to fight the disease. The regime, which views Taiwan as part of its territory, has blocked the island’s participation in the WHA since the island’s president Tsai Ing-wen was elected in 2016.

“WHO barred Taiwan from participation in 2016, just a few months after Taiwan’s free and fair elections,” Azar said at the meeting. “The 23 million Taiwanese people should never be sacrificed to send a political message.”

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in a statement on Monday, said Ghebreyesus “had every legal power and precedent” to include Taiwan in the conference.

“Yet, he instead chose not to invite Taiwan under pressure from the People’s Republic of China,” he said.

“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.”

Reuters and Zachary Steiber contributed to this report. 

From The Epoch Times

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