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Medicine China

Foxconn and TSMC Strike Deal To Buy 10 Million COVID-19 Vaccines For Taiwan 47

Foxconn and TSMC have agreed to buy 10 million COVID-19 vaccine doses for the island of Taiwan. "The two companies will be paying up to $35 a dose of the BioNTech vaccine and donating them to the government; each company has pledged to spend $175 million," reports The Verge. From the report: BioNTech is partnered with Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Co. to distribute its mRNA-based vaccine, which was co-developed with Pfizer, within China. Taiwan claims that the Chinese government blocked an attempt to secure a supply of vaccines from BioNTech, and later refused an offer of vaccine donations from the mainland. With the new arrangement, however, BioNTech and Fosun are being allowed to deal with private companies rather than the Taiwanese government, which Beijing views as illegitimate.

"Since we proposed the vaccine donation and started negotiating for the purchase, there had been no guidance or interference from Beijing over the acquisition," Foxconn founder Terry Gou wrote on Facebook, in remarks translated by Nikkei. "We appreciate that the negotiation was allowed to go through as a business matter." [...] TSMC and Foxconn say the newly secured BioNTech doses will be shipped from its factories in Germany and should start to arrive in Taiwan from late September.
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Foxconn and TSMC Strike Deal To Buy 10 Million COVID-19 Vaccines For Taiwan

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  • With the new arrangement, however, BioNTech and Fosun are being allowed to deal with private companies rather than the Taiwanese government, which Beijing views as illegitimate.

    Ah, nice to know that health and pettiness don't mix.

    • Re:Small minded. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by enigma32 ( 128601 ) on Monday July 12, 2021 @07:00PM (#61576621)

      You were perhaps expecting better behavior from the Chinese government? Seems unlikely.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Or do you mean the Taiwanese government? After all, numerous times they were offered the vaccine by China, but refused. The KMT party and local governments were all asking to be able to procure the vaccine on their own, but the central government refused to allow it. It wasn't until Foxconn's Terry Gou (KMT), that private companies tried and eventually found a way out of the stalemate by making a deal with Fosun.

        • The "central government" of one country is refusing to allow the government of another country to acquire the vaccine. Pretty evil, right?

          But it's okay, I get it. Everybody's gotta make money somehow. Here's your 50 cents.

      • You were perhaps expecting better behavior from the Chinese government?

        No, but the pettiness was on both sides.

        Taiwan refused to deal directly with the PRC. So the PRC said "No vaccines for you."

        Sure, the PRC could have taken the higher road and shipped the vaccine. That would have been "the right thing to do" especially since the PRC considers the people of Taiwan to be their own.

        But Taiwan could have set aside their pride and put the welfare of their people first and asked directly.

        Both sides refused to budge, like the North and South going Zax [youtube.com].

        • Re:Small minded. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by enigma32 ( 128601 ) on Monday July 12, 2021 @08:12PM (#61576781)

          So you don't see any issue with the implied legitimacy of Beijing's claims to Taiwan if Taiwan were to accept the PRC's offers?

          It's exactly the kind of soft-power game China has been playing for years, and you're buying into it like so many other people that don't actually follow it all very closely.

          The PRC actively prevents Taiwan from interacting with the international community, in a number of ways. This is not an instance of "two crybabies on the playground", as you say below. This is an instance of one kid preventing another from playing with anyone else, and then being offended when the bullied kid doesn't want to take an icecream from them. The bully is the one in the wrong, not the one being bullied.

    • Did anyone think for a second that the CCP wouldn't try to get in the way of getting vaccines to Taiwan? I mean, they're already using their Sinovac vaccine as a lever to get small impoverished nations to break off diplomatic relations with Taipei in favor of Beijing, as the CCP will not have any relations with any nation that recognizes the Republic of China as a country.

      China doesn't give a shit how many people die, as long as it furthers their own interests and rhetoric. This has been true since the pu

  • Good, we need them healthy and not dying from Covid to build our chips and electronics.

  • 10 million doses covers five million people.

    That would cover health care workers and a lot of older people, so at least it's a serious lifesaver.

  • Taiwan = country (Score:5, Insightful)

    by livefromdaedalus ( 8364967 ) on Monday July 12, 2021 @09:27PM (#61576879)
    Why does the summary call it the "island of Taiwan"? Taiwan is a country. I don't see "island of New Zealand" or "island of Great Britain" when referring to those countries...
    • The official name of the country is "Republic of China."

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      Because officially, according to their own constitution, the government of the Republic of China consider themselves to be the legitimate government of all of China. They consider mainland China under PRC control to be a kind of rebel province. The PRC believes more-or-less the same thing, except to them, Taiwan under RoC control is the rebel province. "Taiwan" just refers the the island.

      Many residents of the island of Taiwan think of Taiwan as a separate country, and the current president of the ROC (Ts

    • Taiwan is a country.

      According to whom? You ask a question as if the conclusion is foregone. Many people in the world do not consider Taiwan as a country.

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