How the ISO helps China change Taiwan's status quo
A harmful meme which replicates itself with ease
Many organizations, corporations, governments claim that they are "apolitical" and that they simply use the "standard" International Organization for Standardization (ISO) country codes as a guide to determine how they list Taiwan.
The problem with this is that in the ISO country names and code elements list, Taiwan's "short form" is given as "Taiwan, Province of China." This name is neither short nor does it reflect Taiwan's de facto independent status.
However, it does function as a "meme" or "verbal virus."
Furthermore, the ISO has also listed Taiwan as China's Region 7, basically ignoring Taiwan's de facto status and annexing the smaller country to the larger one.
This is outrageous!
No, it's not enough for the 50 Cent Army to dominate the Internet with pro-CCP/China/anti-Taiwan propaganda -- now the ISO is helping China to annex Taiwan by spreading the standardized-coding "virus" around the globe.
This "virus" created by the UN Statistical Division (which is under the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs [UNDESA] has been headed by Chinese official Sha Zukang since July 1, 2007) was designed to annex Taiwan by using the convenient excuse of ISO "standardization" codes, which are used by many businesses. On many university advertisements for recruiting international students on the Internet, Taiwan has been erroneously listed as a "province of China" most likely due to this ISO country code "virus."
Background
Readers who are unfamiliar with the following subjects might want to take a look at the links below before continuing:
* ISO 3166 FAQs
* ISO 3166-1 (scroll down to "Criteria for inclusion")
* ISO 3166-3
* UN Report of the Working Group on Country Names
Since Taiwan's application to enter the United Nations was rejected by UN in July 2007, not being a UN member, Taiwan is not listed in the United Nations Bulletin Country Names.
The UN Terminology Section is the current authority on country names in all of the official languages of the UN, and it does not have Taiwan listed.
The list of names in Country and Region Codes for Statistical Use of the UN Statistics Division is based on the Bulletin Country Names and other UN sources, the name "Taiwan, Province of China" has obviously come from "other UN sources."
What are these so-called "other UN sources"?
The UN always cites UN Resolution 2758 as "proof" that Taiwanese people should not have their own seat at the UN because it interprets this resolution as meaning that "Taiwan is a province of China" and that Taiwanese people should therefore be represented by the Chinese government -- a government that has never governed Taiwan and has not even been chosen by its own people to represent China through democratic elections.
UN Resolution 2758 actually resolves the question of who should represent China, but it mentions nothing about who should represent the 23 million people of Taiwan.
On the contrary, the Standard country or area codes and geographical regions for statistical use has included this:
The designations employed and the presentation of material at this site do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.Read that again: The designations do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever concerning the legal status or delineation of frontiers or boundaries of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities. The UN terribly contradicts itself by doing those very things when it wrongly interprets Taiwan's status as being part of China (citing UN Resolution 2758 as the authoritative source), but the UN Secretariat also declares that it has no opinion on the legal status of any country.
How ridiculous!
The freedom to speak the truth
But Taiwan is a country, says a geographic expert who does not work for any UN organizations and who can therefore speak the truth. There is no doubt whatsoever that Taiwan fulfills all the criteria for a country. The only reason Taiwan isn't a member in the UN is the political pressure from China, a country which frequently reminds the world that it doesn't rule out the use of force in order to annex Taiwan as one of its provinces.
Logical breakdown
Many countries existed long before the creation of the UN. If a country decides not to join the UN as a member, it does not mean this country doesn't exist. (See also: this comment by Andrew Kerslake.) In other words, it's not up to the UN to determine whether a territory is indeed a country. It can only decide whether it wishes to accept the application of a country which decides to join and either welcome them or not.
Many countries represented in the UN are led by authoritarian governments which have not gained their rule via any democratic elections at home. Consequently, the UN has many problems, and its original mission of promoting world peace has not been fulfilled.
The UN has no rights (see reference number 2 below, regarding MOU) to sign any memo against a non-member state (such as the WHO's secret MOU with China which says that communications between the WHO and Taiwan be routed through China), nor to arbitrarily change a country's name because of pressure from another bullying state.
The Taiwanese people had a Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) administration imposed upon them. They've experienced the KMT's 228 Massacre, and they've suffered under the suppression of White Terror and the longest period of martial law in modern history. Taiwan's gradual transition to democracy requires further support from strong democratic nations.
Taiwan's people want a new Taiwan constitution to replace the flawed ROC constitution (promulgated 63 years ago in a foreign country) so that the occupying administrator's rules of law can be declared obsolete, and its legislature can function normally through fair elections. Otherwise, committees such as the Legislative Yuan's Procedural Committee (because of this pan-blue dominated committee's arbitrary prioritization of proposed bills, certain important bills are purposely delayed or blocked completely from being included in the agenda for discussion), the Executive Yuan's Referendum Review Committee, the unconstitutional National Communications Commission (NCC), and others will continue to hinder Taiwan's full democratic reform.
The controversies of a rising undemocratic China and the business opportunities there have put Taiwan's democracy in jeopardy. Once Taiwan is
The UN's geographic "experts" have simply ignored Taiwan's de facto status and have helped their Chinese chief of UNDESA to achieve his country's agenda by spreading the ISO country code "virus" around the global business community, using this so called "standard" code to shift the status quo towards China's favor. This calls their professional ethics and expertise into question.
If the UN is serious about the promotion of human rights and human dignity, its geographic "experts" should be investigated for giving in to "pressure" from above, and the UNDESA head, Sha Zukang, should be probed for "incompetence" and for his role in helping the spread of the Taiwan ISO country code "virus" around the globe.
Suggested actions
Since the ROC has never been recognized as having taken over Formosa's sovereignty, any Taiwanese organization(s) with sufficient financial resources should sue the ISO. If the ISO is as innocent as it claims to be and merely updates their records by "default" (i.e., transferring UN "expert advise"), then there is no need for the ISO to exist at all. Since the ISO's mission is to standardize things, they shouldn't just follow orders from other "experts" without judging or adding its own input; otherwise, they are no experts themselves.
Since freedom of expression should be encouraged in universities, Taiwanese studying abroad or planning to do so can also help out when discovering errors about how Taiwan is listed. Write (politely) to school officials letting them know that such errors are offensive, and ask them to label your home country in a way which reflects Taiwan's de facto status.
USCIS: preserving the truth, setting the right "standard"
The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is not ambiguous about Taiwan's status. It is a US executive branch that honors Taiwanese people's right to call their country "Taiwan." In an official memorandum dated December 1, 2008 [62 KB PDF], it states that for purposes of the United States immigration law, Taiwan is to be considered a separate independent country despite the Department of State's "one-China" policy.
Consequently, a United States passport may not be issued showing its owner's place of birth as "Taiwan, China," "Taiwan, Republic of China," or "Taiwan ROC." For post-WWII immigrants to Taiwan who were born in China, it should show "People's Republic of China" as their country of birth; however, their country of nationality (on application form N-400) should still be listed as "Taiwan" as explained below.
Here's an excerpt from the memo:
The adjudicator must not require an applicant to list "Taiwan, PRC," "Taiwan, China," "Taiwan, Republic of China," "Taiwan, ROC," or "People's Republic of China" as the country of birth or nationality on Form N-400 if the applicant has indicated "Taiwan" and the documentary evidence submitted supports their claim.Reference:
[...]
Note that some applicants may have been born in the PRC but currently hold a
Taiwan passport because they moved from the mainland (PRC) to Taiwan long ago.
For those applicants, the country of birth should be listed as "People's Republic of
China" and the country of nationality should be listed as "Taiwan" on their
Form N-400.
1. The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) - an agency affiliated with the US Department of Commerce, after consulting with the American Institute in Taiwan, has stopped referring to Taiwan as "Chinese Taipei" and refers to Taiwan simply by its proper name: Taiwan.
2. A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) should involve the mutual benefits of the signing parties only. It should contain nothing about a third party -- that is, it shouldn't involve anyone outside of the negotiation process.
3. When it comes to Taiwan, National Geographic is "NG".
(Tim Maddog edited this post)
Labels: ISO country codes, MOU, Sha Zukang, Taiwan not part of China, UNDESA, US Citizenship and Immigration, virus
1 Comments:
Suggest you post a letter that concerned citizens of any country can send to their respective foreign ministers in protest at this offensive outcome of ISO country codes/names.
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