President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday that Taiwan would be able to make greater contributions to global health if it were a member of the WHO.
In a prerecorded video message in English for the Taiwan Global Health Forum Series, held to coincide with the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA), Lai noted Taiwan has long played an active role in global health and remains committed to sharing its experiences as a responsible and reliable partner.
“Our world is seeing many profound changes. Technology is developing fast, populations are aging, and new infectious diseases continue to emerge. Therefore, we bear greater responsibilities than ever before,” Lai said.
Photo courtesy of the Presidential Office
He added that, as Taiwan’s first president with a medical background, he is eager to join forces to build a “Healthy Taiwan.”
In the video, Lai said Taiwan would share its vision and engage in dialogue with attending participants on three key areas at the forum: digital health and artificial intelligence (AI) governance, cancer policy and innovation, and global efforts to eliminate hepatitis C.
Digital health and AI are reshaping healthcare, and Taiwan is building a framework for responsible governance to ensure medical AI is safe, effective and trustworthy, Lai added.
“Taiwan’s booming digital health industry will keep driving innovation. With tools like medical AI and robotics, and even the medical metaverse, we can enhance precision health and quality of care in every way,” he said.
On cancer, the president said Taiwan is strengthening prevention and treatment through early screening, precision medicine and improved access to innovative therapies, while also establishing a fund for new cancer drugs and updating the National Health Insurance (NHI) system to ensure timely, affordable and high-quality care for all patients.
Lastly, on hepatitis C, Lai emphasized that Taiwan achieved elimination five years ahead of the WHO’s 2030 target, crediting strong governance and the NHI system for integrating screening, treatment and prevention into a unified strategy.
Taiwan aims to share its experience and learn from global partners, adding that international cooperation is essential to achieving the long-term goal of eliminating hepatitis C, Lai said.
“By joining the WHO, Taiwan could better ensure the right to health for all our people, and do even more to support the rest of the world,” he added.
Organized by the Ministry of Health and Welfare, the two-day forum is being held at Hotel President Wilson in Geneva, Switzerland, from May 18-19, coinciding with the 79th WHA which runs from May 18-23 in the same city.
For the 10th consecutive year, Taiwan has not received an invitation to attend the WHA, and China said last week that it had decided not to agree to the “Taiwan region” participating in this year’s assembly.
Taiwan has not attended the WHA since 2016, when it participated as an observer during a period of warmer cross- strait relations with Beijing.
Instead, Taiwan has been staging events each year to coincide with the assembly in Geneva, where the WHO is headquartered and the WHA is usually held.
Yangmingshan National Park authorities yesterday urged visitors to respect public spaces and obey the law after a couple was caught on a camera livestream having sex at the park’s Qingtiangang (擎天崗) earlier in the day. The Shilin Police Precinct in Taipei said it has identified a suspect and his vehicle registration number, and would summon him for questioning. The case would be handled in accordance with public indecency charges, it added. The couple entered the park at about 11pm on Thursday and began fooling around by 1am yesterday, the police said, adding that the two were unaware of the park’s all-day live
A former soldier and an active-duty army officer were yesterday indicted for allegedly selling classified military training materials to a Chinese intelligence operative for a total of NT$79,440. The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office indicted Chen Tai-yin (陳泰尹) and Lee Chun-ta (李俊達) for contravening the National Security Act (國家安全法) and the Anti-Corruption Act (貪污治罪條例). Chen left the military in September 2013 after serving alongside then-staff sergeant Lee, now an army lieutenant, at the 21st Artillery Command of the army’s Sixth Corps from 2011 to 2013, according to the indictment. Chen met a Chinese intelligence operative identified as “Wang” (王) through a friend in November
Minister of Digital Affairs Lin Yi-ching (林宜敬) yesterday cited regulatory issues and national security concerns as an expert said that Taiwan is among the few Asian regions without Starlink. Lin made the remarks on Facebook after funP Innovation Group chief executive officer Nathan Chiu (邱繼弘) on Friday said Taiwan and four other countries in Asia — China, North Korea, Afghanistan and Syria — have no access to Starlink. Starlink has become available in 166 countries worldwide, including Ukraine, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, in the six years since it became commercial, he said. While China and North Korea block Starlink, Syria is not
Yangmingshan National Park’s Qingtiangang (擎天崗) nature area has gone viral after a park livestream camera observed a couple in the throes of intimate congress, which was broadcast live on YouTube, drawing large late-night crowds and sparking a backlash over noise, bright lights and disruption to wildlife habitat. The area’s livestream footage appeared to show a couple engaging in sexual activity on a picnic table in the park on Friday last week, with the uncensored footage streamed publicly online. The footage quickly spread across social media, prompting a tide of visitors to travel to the site to “check in” and recreate the