* Primary concern is citizens' health and safety - Duterte
* Taiwan plans countermeasures if Philippines did not lift
ban
* Duterte says ban has nothing to do with one China policy
(Adds Taiwan Foreign Ministry statement)
TAIPEI/MANILA, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Philippine President
Rodrigo Duterte rejected on Thursday Taiwan's appeal to lift a
ban on its citizens visiting the country, saying his primary
concern was the safety of Filipinos.
Taiwan said it was considering countermeasures if the
Philippines did not lift the ban it imposed this week to contain
the spread of the coronavirus, but Duterte said the restriction
stays "until the danger persists".
"My primary concern is the health and safety of our
countrymen", Duterte was quoted by his spokesman, Salvador
Panelo, as saying.
Taiwan is governed entirely separately from China, but
Beijing claims the island as its own and the World Health
Organization (WHO) clubs its virus cases in the category for
China, which has led some countries to impose the same
restrictions on Taiwanese as on Chinese citizens.
More than 115,000 Philippine citizens live and work in
Taiwan, mainly in factories and employed as household help.
The Philippines' decision to include Taiwan as part of a ban
on people from China visiting the country had "nothing to do
with" the One China policy, Panelo said, quoting Duterte.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou told reporters in
Taipei that Taiwan had a planned response if the Philippines
maintained its ban, but she declined to elaborate, saying a
decision was awaited from the Philippines government.
"We will continue to communicate with the Philippines and
explain that this is a one-sided and wrong decision by the
Philippines' health ministry, which has already affected the
relationship between the two countries of Taiwan and the
Philippines," Ou said.
In a statement following the Philippines announcement that
the ban would stay, Taiwan's Foreign Ministry said it was still
considering its response, and that it was hoping Manila made the
"correct decision".
Taiwan and the Philippines have close economic and cultural
ties, but no formal diplomatic relations, as the Philippines,
like most countries, only recognises the government in Beijing,
and not in Taipei.
Taiwan has repeatedly complained that, with its 18 virus
cases compared with some 60,000 in China, it is unfair for the
WHO to lump them together with China and mislead other countries
into believing Taiwan faces an equally dire epidemic.