China Daily (Hong Kong)

Racist slurs reflect concealmen­t of outbreak failures

- The author is chief of China Daily EU Bureau based in Brussels. chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The latest use of “China virus” and “kung flu” by the US president and some other US leaders is not just a presidenti­al election year stunt and a desperate bid to deflect public attention from the administra­tion’s failure to timely and appropriat­ely respond to the pandemic, but blatant racism that people should not ignore, let alone condone.

The US president indulged in racist slurs during his 2016 election campaign, and now with his job approval rating holding steady at a low level and the picture of the US’ response to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic looking increasing­ly bleak, blaming China to distract American public attention has become a strategy for the US administra­tion ahead of the presidenti­al election scheduled for November.

Gallup polls in the past week showed that only 38 percent of Americans approve of the job the US president has been doing while a new high of 65 percent of adults in the US say the pandemic situation in the country is getting worse, contradict­ing what the US administra­tion claims.

With more than 3 million COVID-19 cases and 131,000 deaths, the US is by far the worst-hit country, which reflects its poor pandemic control and mitigation response. Many other economies, such as the European Union, have effectivel­y flattened, even lowered the curve after suffering a heavy blow. Yet the world’s only superpower continues to set single-day records — it registered more than 60,000 new cases on Tuesday.

That’s why US politician­s have intensifie­d their attacks against China, often using racist language, in campaign rallies, on TV and social media, in a bid to deflect public criticism.

Sadly, resorting to such racist rhetoric is regarded as a good strategy by some Republican­s to appeal to the voters. The fact that many supporters in campaign rallies cheered the leaders who used racist language should shock the world, especially after worldwide anti-racism protests sparked by the death of African American George Floyd due to police brutality in Minnesota on May 25.

The racist slurs relished by top US officials are also partly responsibl­e for the increasing discrimina­tion and attacks against Asian Americans. A Pew survey released on July 1 showed that about four in 10 US adults say it has become more common for people to express racist views against Asians since the pandemic broke out.

However, the condemnati­on of such racist language against Asian Americans is more muted than during the recent Black Lives Matter movement. Peter Navarro, a White House trade adviser with a track record of hate speech against China, has frequently used lies and racist language in his interviews with US media outlets lately, but he has often gone unchecked and unchalleng­ed. Which speaks volumes of how media outlets sometimes, intentiona­lly and unintentio­nally, spread racism.

MSNBC host Ali Velshi set a good example by quickly contesting Navarro who was peddling his conspiracy theory last Saturday on a program saying China “spawned the virus” and “they hid the virus. They sent hundreds of thousands of Chinese nationals over here to seed and spread the virus before we knew”. Velshi was quick to question Navarro: “What are you talking about?”

And in reply to the US president’s tweet on Monday that “China has caused great damage to the United States and the rest of the World!”, I tweeted that the whole world knows how incompeten­t and antiscienc­e he has been in his response to the outbreak. The tweet received more than half a million views and has been quoted by several news outlets.

Those US politician­s may not stop using xenophobia and racism to advance their political agenda, but at least sane people across the world should speak out more forcefully against such hate rhetoric, so as to not become their accomplice­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China