Sen. Cruz Calls on ICAO to Include Taiwan in International Response to Coronavirus
ICAO must begin coordinating with Taiwan; end political censorship
HOUSTON, Texas - As the novel coronavirus continues to spread throughout China and around the world, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Chairman of the Subcommittee on Aviation and Space, this week sent a letter calling on the Secretary General of the United Nations' International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to fully include Taiwan - a country ICAO has systematically excluded - in the international response to this deadly outbreak.
In his letter, Sen. Cruz also criticized ICAO for taking action against journalists and policy analysts who criticized ICAO for its exclusion of Taiwan as a result of pressure from the Chinese Communist Party.
As Sen. Cruz wrote:
"It is deeply concerning that in the midst of this emergency, which requires the greatest degree of international cooperation and transparency, your organization has not only excluded Taiwan but has censored calls for its inclusion. Refusing to share up-to-date standards and procedures with the fifth busiest airport in Asia deprives that airport of the data necessary to prevent further spread of 2019-nCoV, thereby endangering the nearly 24 million citizens of Taiwan and countless people around the world."
He added:
"Taiwan must be fully included in the international response to this deadly outbreak, and it must be offered every possible resource in this time of need. This is no time for the ICAO to allow the CCP to advance its exceptionalist agenda at the expense of the Taiwanese people. The current situation cannot be allowed to continue.
"You and ICAO must begin coordinating with Taiwan, including through the sharing of information and logistical planning and support. You must also immediately move to enhance transparency into this issue and surrounding ones, including by ending political censorship and unblocking users from social media. ICAO's mission is at risk, and with it the lives of millions of people around the world."
Last week, Sen. Cruz joined Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) and members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in sending a letter to World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus expressing their concerns surrounding Taiwan's exclusion from the World Health Organization (WHO) and urging the WHO to grant Taiwan observer status at WHO meetings. As part of the international response to this deadly outbreak, Sen. Cruz also called last week for the administration to issue a temporary travel ban to and from China and implement advanced screenings at U.S. airports to help ensure the health and safety of traveling public.
Sen. Cruz's full letter to the Secretary General of the ICAO is available here and below:
Dr. Fang Liu
Secretary General
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
999 Robert-Bourassa Boulevard
Montréal, Québec H3C 5H7, Canada
Secretary General Liu,
I am concerned about the International Civil Aviation Organization's (ICAO) systematic exclusion of Taiwan from the ICAO's forums and resources, as well as what appears to be a recent and systematic effort to stem criticism of that exclusion.
The situation has become particularly acute in recent weeks as the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) first identified in Wuhan, China has spread across the world to nearly 20 countries. Inside China, 2019-nCov has infected thousands and killed more than 200 people, with a 26 percent increase in confirmed cases over recent days. It has now been declared a public-health emergency of international concern by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Taiwan is directly endangered by the outbreak. There are also over 1 million citizens of Taiwan working or living in China, many of them in Wuhan, China, where the virus was first detected. Wuhan is nearly 600 miles from Taipei. If 2019-nCoV spreads to Taiwan, there is a significant chance it will spread beyond the region, in part because Taiwan's Taoyuan International Airport is the fifth busiest airport in Asia, handling over 45 million passengers each year.
ICAO is a specialized agency of the United Nations tasked with international civil aviation safety, charged with providing the basis for and ensuring "safe, secure, efficient...civilian air sector."
Nevertheless, in response to efforts by the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to isolate Taiwan, the Taiwanese have been excluded from its resources and forums. Moreover, there are reports that the ICAO has blocked numerous Twitter accounts that have criticized this decision, including accounts belonging to journalists, Capitol Hill staffers and D.C.-based analysts.
It is deeply concerning that in the midst of this emergency, which requires the greatest degree of international cooperation and transparency, your organization has not only excluded Taiwan but has censored calls for its inclusion. Refusing to share up-to-date standards and procedures with the fifth busiest airport in Asia deprives that airport of the data necessary to prevent further spread of 2019-nCoV, thereby endangering the nearly 24 million citizens of Taiwan and countless people around the world.
This situation is so at odds with ICAO's mission that it raises concerns regarding potential conflicts of interest. You have previously been the General Administrator of Civil Aviation of China, an agency of the People's Republic of China (PRC). There is a credible appearance of impropriety, in which you are pursuing the agenda of your former employer rather than the mission of the ICAO.
Some officials have suggested that member countries are sending pertinent information to Chinese agencies to be passed along. There is no reason to believe that information would be passed along, and indeed reports suggest it is not being transmitted.
Taiwan must be fully included in the international response to this deadly outbreak, and it must be offered every possible resource in this time of need. This is no time for the ICAO to allow the CCP to advance its exceptionalist agenda at the expense of the Taiwanese people.
The current situation cannot be allowed to continue.
You and ICAO must begin coordinating with Taiwan, including through the sharing of information and logistical planning and support. You must also immediately move to enhance transparency into this issue and surrounding ones, including by ending political censorship and unblocking users from social media.
ICAO's mission is at risk, and with it the lives of millions of people around the world.
Sincerely,
/s/
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