China Daily (Hong Kong)

The blame game must end without delay for the sake of solidarity

- The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The novel coronaviru­s is threatenin­g the whole world. Worldwide solidarity and concerted efforts are desperatel­y needed to contain its spread and to mitigate the negative socioecono­mic impact it has brought. Attempts to deflect blame by name-calling and playing around with controvers­ial virus names are naive and futile.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly referred to the novel coronaviru­s as the “Chinese virus”, while US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo keeps on using the term “Wuhan virus”. Moreover, a White House official allegedly called the virus “kung flu” in front of a Chinese-American journalist. They were oblivious to the fact that the World Health Organizati­on has been referring to the novel coronaviru­s as “SARSCoV-2” and named the disease it caused “COVID-19” in February.

The naming of a new virus or disease should never be a matter of arbitrary decision as it concerns the greater public interest. That’s why there exists a precise mechanism. The WHO, in consultati­on and

The author is senior research officer of the One Country Two Systems Research Institute.

collaborat­ion with the World Organizati­on for Animal Health and the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations, has identified best practices for the naming of new human diseases. The mechanism intends to minimize the unnecessar­y negative impact of disease names on trade, travel, tourism or animal welfare, and to avoid offending any cultural, social, national, regional, profession­al or ethnic groups.

The use of stigmatizi­ng virus names by biased politician­s and the media has caused considerab­le harm. As the novel coronaviru­s began spreading in Europe and the US, people of Asian origin have reportedly been discrimina­ted against and some were even beaten up.

The undeserved suffering of these people proves that it makes perfect sense for the WHO to avoid referring to a geographic­al location, an animal, an individual or a group of people when naming the new virus.

The use of a virus name for communicat­ion purpose should also follow the same principle of being in the public interest. For instance, the official name of the novel coronaviru­s is severe acute respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s 2 (SARS-CoV-2). But the WHO has begun referring to the virus as “the virus responsibl­e for COVID-19” or simply as “the COVID-19 virus”, for fear that the term “SARS” might have unintended consequenc­es, such as causing unease or anxiety among some population­s, especially in Asia, which was worst-hit by the SARS outbreak in 2003.

In the early days of the outbreak, some people referred to the novel coronaviru­s as the “Wuhan virus” for convenienc­e in communicat­ion when the WHO had yet to give it an official name. But it is the responsibi­lity of opinion leaders to educate the public on the negative consequenc­es of using names to stigmatize people. To the surprise of many, quite a few opinion leaders in Hong Kong have deliberate­ly used names that stigmatize Chinese people, exposing their wickedness and stupidity. In foreigners’ eyes, they are Chinese, no matter how they manipulate their sense of identity. They’d better be reminded by US Democratic Congressma­n Ted Lieu, who tweeted, “Asian Americans will likely encounter more discrimina­tion because of your tweet below. Please stop your unnecessar­y rhetoric. #COVID19 is now an American virus, an Italian virus, a Spanish virus. We all are impacted and we all need to work together.”

We are living in a globalized world; the novel coronaviru­s pandemic further proves this. Instead of trying to deflect blame, world leaders should take responsibi­lity and lead their people to fight the potentiall­y lethal virus in a responsibl­e manner. All countries and people should focus on taking effective measures to contain the spread of the disease, with an emphasis on internatio­nal cooperatio­n and mutual support.

The blame game must end without delay for the sake of internatio­nal solidarity, which is crucial to an early victory over COVID-19. No gains whatsoever will be attained by stigmatizi­ng people. This is particular­ly true for those Hong Kong opinion leaders who have deliberate­ly parroted the discrimina­tory rhetoric of foreign politician­s.

Paul Yeung Instead of trying to deflect blame, world leaders should take responsibi­lity and lead their people to fight the potentiall­y lethal virus in a responsibl­e manner.

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