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Home The News News UN should rescind 2758 interpretation, Marshall Islands’ Kabua says

UN should rescind 2758 interpretation, Marshall Islands’ Kabua says

Marshall Islands President David Kabua on Wednesday called on the UN to rescind its interpretation of Resolution 2758, which bars Taiwan from participating in the international organization.

There is still a “visible crack” in the UN, as it “will never be whole and complete without the meaningful participation of the 23 million people of Taiwan,” Kabua said in his address on the second day of the General Debate at the 78th General Assembly in New York.

He also criticized the UN’s specialized agencies, meetings and mechanisms for what he described as their continuous efforts to close the doors to journalists and visitors from Taiwan.

Marshall Islands President David Kabua addresses the UN General Assembly in New York City on Wednesday.

Photo: AFP

The root of the problem is that the “UN bureaucracy” continues to stick to a “wrongful misinterpretation of Resolution 2758,” using it to bar UN engagement with the people of Taiwan and their democratic system, he said.

“We must have the courage to recognize the reality of the present situation and relegate this outdated dogma to the vaults of history,” said Kabua, whose Pacific island nation has been a diplomatic ally of Taiwan for 25 years.

Taiwan left the UN in 1971. Resolution 2758, which was adopted by the UN 26th General Assembly in 1971 to resolve the issue of China’s representation, recognizes the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as the “only lawful representative of China,” but does not mention Taiwan and does not state that “Taiwan is part of the PRC,” as China claims.

Eswatini King Mswati III addresses the UN General Assembly in New York City on Wednesday.

Photo: AFP

King Mswati III of Eswatini, Taiwan’s only diplomatic ally in Africa, also voiced his support for Taiwan’s inclusion in the UN in his address on Wednesday.

“Sustaining the SDGs [Sustainable Development Goals] will require that member states develop innovative financing strategies to ensure that implementation reaches those most left behind,” King Mswati said.

“At this critical juncture, including Taiwan is an essential next step if we are to successfully achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,” he said. “We call for Taiwan’s inclusion in the United Nations system, which encompasses participation in meetings, mechanisms and activities that pertain to the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.”

Doing so would not only improve global cooperation and partnership, but also emphasize the principle of ensuring that “no one is left behind,” he said.

The day before, Belizean President John Briceno also emphasized Taiwan’s role in helping further the SDGs.

“The SDGs is a collective commitment. Taiwan and other partners are supporting our pursuit, and we call on others to join us in inclusivity, equity and solidarity,” Briceno said.

The 78th General Assembly began on Sept. 5 at the UN headquarters in New York and the General Debate is being held until Tuesday next week.

Separately, Representative to the US Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴) in a USA Today op-ed on Wednesday reiterated a call for the UN and international organizations to permit Taiwanese participation.

Detailing the ways in which the UN has misinterpreted Resolution 2758 to shut Taiwan out of the organization and its bodies, such as the WHO, Hsiao wrote that “the people of Taiwan resent this discrimination.”

“There is an urgent need to stop Resolution 2758’s misinterpretation, which has not only damaged the rule of law within the United Nations, but also silenced the voices of the Taiwanese people,” she wrote.

“The United Nations should bear in mind that it is ruled by the peoples, not by authoritarian regimes,” she said, quoting from its founding charter.

“The legitimacy and moral authority of the United Nations to use its power is lawful only when consented to by the peoples over which that political power is exercised,” she added.


Source: Taipei Times - 2023/09/22



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Newsflash


Kazuya Shimizu yesterday hugs Mika Tanaka, the lady who helped him locate his place of birth in Hualien County.
Photo: Yang Yi-chung, Taipei Times

Born in Taiwan, but forced to leave his home after Japan lost World War II, Kazuya Shimizu yesterday finally realized his dream of revisiting the site of the village in Hualien County where he was born.

The 70-year-old Shimizu is a wansei, the Japanese term used to describe someone born or who grew up in Taiwan and is a descendant of Japanese immigrants who had come to Taiwan during the Japanese occupation from 1895 to 1945.