West's 'blame China' game destructive
Scholar: Country deserves credit for 'a remarkable job in containing the virus'

"Blame China" rhetoric and longstanding "yellow peril" scare tactics by the West are creating hostility toward China and its people, said Jenny Clegg, vice-president of the Society for Anglo-Chinese Understanding, who has called on nations to better communicate and overcome their mistrust.
"Both mainstream and social media are feeding a 'blame China' narrative, often spreading fake news or partial truths which is creating hostility toward China and Chinese people with an alarming rise in hate crimes," Clegg said.
According to the Conservative Friends of the Chinese, an organization representing British-Chinese communities, there has been a record number of racially aggravated incidents nationally, including nearly 300 hate crimes against British-Chinese communities during the first three months of the year. There were 375 such offenses recorded during the whole of 2019.
Clegg said the trigger for much of the trouble came when some United States politicians insisted on calling the novel coronavirus "the Wuhan virus" or "the Chinese virus".
She said that we don't call AIDS the US disease, nor Ebola the African disease. It's easy to see that some US politicians are looking for a scapegoat to deflect attention from their own incompetence, but they are politicizing the agenda here in a very dangerous way, attempting to frame China as the new enemy.
She said the "blame China" rhetoric is being repeated in Western media every day. She gave the example of how Western media portrayed the Wuhan lockdown as a "draconian act" and talked of Chinese people living "in a kind of semi-gulag". And of how Western media have accused China of lying about the numbers of cases and fatalities, and of withholding information about the virus from the start. She said Western media even portray China's offer of medical assistance to other countries as some kind of "underhanded global takeover".
Clegg, who has a particular interest in China and the Pacific region and who authored the book China's Global Strategy: Towards a Multipolar World, said the West has a long history of "yellow peril scares" going back to the first days of mass immigration in the 1860s. The scares stoke people's fears that China is about to swamp the world.
"So, media stories resonate with these deep-rooted fears, conveying a subtle message that China is a danger to the world. China is kept at a distance and there's a general lack of engagement with Chinese people and Chinese society," she said.
Clegg said China actually deserves credit for acting decisively and doing "a remarkable job in containing the virus, with fewer than 5,000 deaths".
"Yes, there were mistakes at first-let's not forget that China was the first to face this virus-but we now know how difficult it is to detect and to test," Clegg said. "What the government did was rigorously follow standard public health procedures to test, trace and isolate. The lockdown really was a lockdown, no matter the short-term damage to the economy."
Clegg said the virus cannot be defeated by governments acting alone, which makes cross-border collaboration vitally important.
"We need dialogue; we need to break down suspicion and mistrust. Security is not about military dominance; it's about cooperation and solidarity," she said. "The enemy is not China; it's the virus. The weapons are not nuclear missiles but international solidarity and cooperation. Security is a shared world interest."
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