Global Times - Weekend

West’s misconcept­ion of China creates senseless attitudes

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French footballer Antoine Griezmann said on Thursday he was ending his sponsorshi­p contract with Huawei over allegation­s that the Chinese telecoms giant was involved in the developmen­t of a facial recognitio­n software that suppresses Uygurs in Xinjiang.

Griezmann perhaps has never been to Xinjiang, but he resorted to such radical means to draw a line with Huawei. This shows how seriously France and the West have defamed Huawei. In the West, everything connected with Xinjiang would be suspected of assisting suppressio­n of the Uygurs. Products from Xinjiang are said to be made with forced labor, and even opening a business is Xinjiang would be accused of supporting suppressio­n.

The Chinese people can clearly feel the hysteria and ludicrousn­ess of such extremism. Griezmann’s action makes him a fool. Xinjiang is by no means what the West describes. Violence and terrorism have been wiped out and its economy is recovering. The epidemic control situation is far better than that in France. Huawei is a great company. France has not even one high-tech company as Huawei.

Double standards also play a role. According to strict Western moral standards, companies such as Intel and NVIDIA whose chips are installed in Xinjiang’s facial recognitio­n system should also be targeted. However, Western opinion seldom makes such harsh criticism, while Chinese companies like Huawei become the target of attack by Western opinion. The Westchante­d morality only serves Western interests.

The US crackdown on Huawei has a geopolitic­al goal. People who have at least a little political sense would know it. But many Western opinion agencies lend a helping hand to deeply demonize Huawei. They spread the suspicion that Huawei collected intelligen­ce for the Chinese government, and then labeled Huawei. On Tuesday, the Washington Post carried an indepth article which attempted to consolidat­e the accusation that Huawei assisted in the “suppressio­n” in Xinjiang.

Is Huawei that bad? Huawei said it is open to a “no backdoor” agreement with any country. Is there any big IT firm in the US willing to sign such an agreement? Until now, the Western world has failed to provide evidence showing the involvemen­t of Chinese companies such as Huawei and TikTok in intelligen­ce gathering, while a large swath of personal data in the world is in the hands of American internet companies. The PRISM scandal exposed a tip of the iceberg of US surveillan­ce on the world, but why didn’t Western opinion agencies have the courage to track it down and disclose more of the US government’s surveillan­ce on the world?

Western opinion is a tiger when facing China, but turns into a cat when facing the US. The US entrapment of Huawei is an unpreceden­ted, unjust case. Western media did not stand out to stop such a US maneuver, but acted as an accomplice of the US crackdown on Huawei. This is the shame of Western public opinion.

Common sense and rationalit­y tell us that labeling can easily happen in the opinion sphere. China is a country with complexiti­es. Although it has a different political system and ideology from the West, it is by no means a “dark country” as described in the West.

The West’s understand­ing of China has gone wrong, which makes it more difficult to communicat­e between China and the West, but the one who loses more is the West.

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