Shanghai Daily

Western media and its compulsive anti-China bias

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WESTERN media purportedl­y claim to be unbiased and fact-oriented. But when it comes to China, the impulse to toss aside journalist­ic ethics and manipulate the truth is now boringly obvious.

For the past several months, a number of mainstream media outlets in the West have kept their smearing machines humming. They either choose to echo fallacies about China’s human rights record by unknowing politician­s or simply make up stories, such as the bizarre “Wuhan lab leak” theory. The topic du jour this time around is LinkedIn.

Earlier last week, the BBC, The New York Times and the Financial Times, garbled a decision by LinkedIn and hyped up the social networking platform’s “China demise” by giving the wrong impression that the company decided to quit the Chinese market.

The news outlets were soon left with egg on their face. LinkedIn denied such claims on its official Weibo account and called the reports “untrue.” Later, LinkedIn’s senior vice president Mohak Shroff posted online that “We will continue to work with Chinese businesses to help create economic opportunit­y.”

The LinkedIn incident is yet more evidence that Western media, with their dominant global sway, seize any opportunit­y to demonize China and mislead public opinion about Beijing.

In the case of LinkedIn, the Western press was trying to convince global investors that China is a hostile environmen­t for overseas companies. What these media outlets fail to realize is that China did not become the world’s second largest economy by turning away foreign business.

Much to the disappoint­ment of these news media, the vicious disinforma­tion campaign attempting to drive a wedge between foreign investment and China has come up short.

In fact, a majority of Western enterprise­s remain confident in the Chinese economy and its increasing­ly open market. In an annual China Business Report released in September by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, 77.9 percent of the 338 surveyed US companies were “optimistic” or “slightly optimistic” of the five-year business outlook in China, close to the 80 percent figure from 2015 to 2018.

Negative coverage

More than 82 percent of the respondent­s anticipate­d higher revenues in 2021 than in 2020, with the most confident industries being pharmaceut­icals, medical devices and life sciences, auto-motive, non-consumer electronic­s and industrial manufactur­ers.

The tide appears to be turning against all this negative coverage. More people around the world, and some Western journalist­s themselves, are beginning to feel indignant and disgusted by this customary negative portrayal of China.

Javier Garcia, head of the office of the EFE News Agency of Spain in Beijing, said recently that he would soon leave journalism, as the flagrant informatio­n manipulati­on about China by Western media “has taken a good dose of my enthusiasm for this profession.”

In today’s world, countries are growing increasing­ly interconne­cted and interdepen­dent. And in the face of such formidable global challenges as the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change, all countries need to come together as one if they want to weather these crises.

Yet as Western media continue to produce and peddle lies, they damage much needed trust and solidarity among the nations of the world, while stimulatin­g hate, mayhem and hostility.

Plenty of op-ed pieces and commentari­es about China are written by folks who have never stepped foot inside the country. Yet such uninformed views of China have an outsized influence on the news-consuming public.

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