Skip to content

US Calls Attention to UN Aviation Body’s Exclusion of Taiwan Amid Virus

  • World

New York City’s First Possible Coronavirus Patient Tested at Manhattan Hospital

New York City health officials said Saturday that a possible coronavirus patient is being treated at Manhattan’s Bellevue Hospital. The patient, who is under 40, recently traveled to China and had a “fever and cough or shortness of breath without another common cause, like influenza and other cold viruses,” the health department said in a statement. It’s not clear if that person, whose identity is being kept private, had traveled to coronavirus epicenter Wuhan, where Chinese regime officials have implemented lockdowns and quarantines. The patient didn’t spend extended time with friends or family after heading back to New York City, said Mayor Bill de Blasio, according to local media outlets. He, however, called on New Yorkers to go to the hospital if they believe they are showing symptoms related to…

US Calls Attention to UN Aviation Body’s Exclusion of Taiwan Amid Virus

The U.S. State Department has criticized the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a United Nations agency overseeing international air transport, for allegedly blocking users on Twitter.

ICAO reportedly blocked several users on the social networking service who made reference to Taiwan’s exclusion from communications regarding international events, notably the current global outbreak of the 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV).

In a statement issued on Feb, 1, department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said the United States is “deeply concerned” by ICAO’s actions and urged the UN body to allow Twitter users to discuss Taiwan freely.

“The United States is deeply concerned about actions taken by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to suppress freedom of expression and curtail important discussion of Taiwan’s legitimate role in international issues.” the spokesperson said.

“Blocking Twitter users who make reference to Taiwan’s participation in international organizations, particularly given the global response to the coronavirus crisis, is outrageous, unacceptable, and not befitting of a UN organization. Taiwan has a relevant and credible voice on transnational health issues, and the United States has long supported its active engagement in international venues, including ICAO, where its expertise can be beneficial.”

“We call upon ICAO to immediately and permanently reverse its practice of blocking discussion of Taiwan on its Twitter properties and make clear publicly its understanding that freedom of expression must always supersede the political insecurities of member states.”

The department’s statement comes shortly after Jessica Drun, a non-resident fellow at the Virginia-based think tank, The Project 2049 Institute claimed ICAO had blocked her on Twitter following several posts explaining the need for Taiwan’s inclusion in critical international communications, particularly in light of the current global health crisis.

Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen said the following on Feb. 3.

The WHO and the International Civil Aviation Organization, two key UN agencies for epidemic prevention, still exclude Taiwan from the global disease prevention system due to political factors.

I call on relevant agencies of the UN to acknowledge the right to health of the Taiwanese people. Disease prevention is a global issue. As Taiwan is on the frontline in dealing with this outbreak, it should not become a gap in a global disease prevention and control system.

Drun wrote in her posts that the ICAO, along with the World Health Organisation refuse to share knowledge with Taiwan authorities;” and that civil aviation authorities for Taoyuan airport, one of busiest regional airports, “do not receive up-to-date info on any potential ICAO-WHO efforts.”

Drun noted that the lack of communication with Taiwan could potentially “nullify any efforts to contain coronavirus and lead to it spreading further,” and that Taiwan wants to make “functional contributions to these organizations” but in a “capacity where sovereignty—as defined by the UN—isn’t a requirement.”

Days later, on Jan. 25, Drun revealed she had been blocked by ICAO, which is led by Fang Liu, a Chinese national, on Twitter following her comments.

The Twitter accounts of several other critics, including those belonging to Capitol Hill staffers and D.C.-based analysts, were also blocked by ICAO, Axios reported.

However, in a statement on Twitter, ICAO said it “has not blocked anyone for asking anything about anywhere. Please do not contribute to the spread of this misinformation.”

Taiwan, officially known as the Republic of China (ROC), is home to 23.78 million people and has a democratically-elected government, military, and currency.

Despite this, China views Taiwan as part of its sovereign territory and has pressurized other countries and international organizations to follow the ‘One China’ policy, asserting that there is only one sovereign state under the name China.

The Republic Of China, which has not been part of ICAO meetings since 2013, has so far reported 964 potential cases of the coronavirus, however so far only 10 have been confirmed, according to local media.

This article is from the Internet:US Calls Attention to UN Aviation Body’s Exclusion of Taiwan Amid Virus

China Reports Bird Flu Outbreak in Hunan Province, 18,000 Chickens Killed

A city in China’s central Hunan province said it killed thousands of chickens following an outbreak of H5N1 bird flu, according to the Chinese regime. The country’s ministry of agriculture said Saturday that 18,000 chickens were culled in Shaoyang, Hunan Province. But that came after some 4,500 chickens were sickened and died, amounting to more than half the farm’s flock. The strain of influenza was the “poultry H5N1 subtype” of the “highly pathogenic bird flu,” the statement read. No human transmission of the bird flu was reported. Shaoyang is located about 300 miles south of Wuhan, the epicenter of the new mystery coronavirus strain that that has triggered lockdowns and quarantines across Hubei province. The coronavirus has prompted a number of countries to suspend flights to and from China and…