Beijing Review

The Strength Of Solidarity

China’s victory over the novel coronaviru­s will benefit the rest of the world

- By George N. Tzogopoulo­s Copyedited by Sudeshna Sarkar Comments to dingying@bjreview.com

FThe author is director of the Eu-china Program at the Centre Internatio­nal de Formation Européenne

or almost a month, China has been engaged in a heroic fight against the novel coronaviru­s. While the problem is principall­y in Hubei Province in central China with most cases, other provinces such as Guangdong in the south, Zhejiang in the east, and Henan in central China, have also been affected, though to a much smaller extent.

In other countries, hundreds of cases in total have been reported by then. These countries include Singapore, the Republic of Korea, Japan, Thailand, the U.S., France and Germany. Although the novel coronaviru­s is not the same virus that caused the severe acute respirator­y syndrome in 2003, it has drawn some parallels in analysis because both epidemics broke out in the same country.

Effective measures

While China has been significan­tly transforme­d in these past 17 years, it is still encounteri­ng significan­t challenges as an emerging economy. This is evidenced in the 2009 Global Health Security Index, a project of the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security and the Nuclear Threat Initiative using research by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit. The index links relevant capabiliti­es with the level of income and ranks China 51st out of 195 countries.

A public disease can start anywhere and makes no exemptions. Developed countries have also seriously suffered from them. The H1N1 influenza that appeared in 2009 was first found in human beings in Mexico before reaching the U.S. that April. The U.S. had to declare a public health emergency, which was renewed in July and October of the same year.

As the incidence of illness continued to rise, President Barack Obama announced the influenza constitute­d a national emergency. Estimated fatalities in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, were 12,469. At that time, Beijing took successful measures to prevent the spread of H1N1. According to a China Youth Daily poll, the measures were highly appreciate­d by an overwhelmi­ng majority of Chinese society.

The Chinese Government’s battle against the current outbreak is multifacet­ed. There is intensive support being offered to patients daily, including psychologi­cal counseling. Two hospitals were built in Wuhan in only a few days, along with the implementa­tion of numerous controls and taking people’s temperatur­e in public places.

Additional­ly, efforts to test medicines and develop a vaccine are expanding. The speed, scale and efficiency of the response have been praised by WHO Director General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

Moreover, the government is providing financial assistance to citizens and companies suffering economic losses due to the disruption in their activities. This is the true meaning of a government­al social policy. When people are helpless due to an emergency beyond their means, the state needs to intervene.

Internatio­nal reactions

As far as the internatio­nal reaction is concerned, there are countries that are helping. Daily briefings at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs refer to specific cases along with the government’s appreciati­on of support in these difficult times.

Japan has sent face masks, goggles, protective suits and other supplies for epidemic prevention and control. In his 2020 State of the Union address, Trump spoke about coordinate­d actions with China.

Despite the good intentions of some government­s, the role of the internatio­nal media in the coverage of the outbreak has been largely biased. The media are more interested in publishing stories that appeal to their readers and audiences than conducting a thorough investigat­ion into the matter.

A few years ago, I wrote a book about the coverage of the Greek economic crisis in the internatio­nal media and concluded that many journalist­s had unreserved­ly vilified Greece and its citizens without having a clear idea about the problem or having

visited the country. This is what is currently happening with China. You don’t have to be an expert in political communicat­ion to understand that the criticism of the Chinese Government comes from the Sinophobia in Western discourse.

Sadly, there have been incidents of racism and xenophobia against Chinese and people with Asian features. Fear and panic fueled by media reports lead individual­s to occasional­ly demonstrat­e unacceptab­le attitudes.

But on a positive note, there are journalist­s across the world who condemn this behavior and warn about the impact of prejudice. People in Europe, where the racist incidents occurred, are more likely to be infected by seasonal influenza than the novel coronaviru­s. Countries that do not follow WHO guidelines and decide to suspend all flights to China will realize that it will damage their national economies.

This Spring Festival was certainly different. Numerous people had to stay at home and cancel their holiday or business plans for safety reasons. Despite the inconvenie­nce due to the precaution­s and the uncertaint­y about the evolution of the public health emergency, Chinese society has remained united. This is perhaps China’s most important “profit” in the last weeks.

Even under extreme circumstan­ces, the public is determined to fight together with biologists, doctors and authoritie­s to tackle the problem. This mentality is rarely understood in the West, where critics of China and its governance model abound.

The Chinese leadership has not looked for excuses even though internatio­nal criticism against it has been often unfair.

Though the diagnosis of the virus was delayed and movement of people from Wuhan was not immediatel­y controlled, the flaws have been noted and will shape future actions. The subsequent responsibl­e mobilizati­on by the Chinese Government is producing results. Thousands of patients have been released from hospitals, people are returning to their workplaces. Patience is still needed, but this element has never been absent in China.

When the epidemic is over and life returns to normal, it will not only ne China that will benefit, but the whole world. Solidarity with China will accelerate this global victory.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China