Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Australia condemns China over fake war crime tweet

Australia's prime minister has demanded an apology for a fake image tweeted by a senior Chinese Foreign Ministry official. The doctored image shows an Australian soldier holding a knife to a child's throat.

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Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Monday said a fake image that was tweeted by a high-ranking Chinese official was "truly repugnant."

Morrison called a media briefing specifical­ly to condemn the posting of the picture, which shows an Australian soldier holding a knife to the throat of a veiled Afghan child carrying a lamb in her arms.

"It is utterly outrageous and cannot be justified on any basis," Morrison said. "The Chinese government should be utterly ashamed of this post. It diminishes them in the world's eyes."

Morrison described the image as being "deeply offensive to every Australian." He said he had reached out to Twitter and Chinese authoritie­s for the immediate removal of the post.

Read more: Can Australia dump China amid trade tensions?

The digitally altered post came from Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian on Monday.

"Shocked by murder of Afghan civilians & prisoners by Australian soldiers," Zhao tweeted alongside the image.

Responses that came to the tweet from those springing to Australia's defense referred to the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre and the repression and persecutio­n of Muslims in China's northweste­rn region of Xinjiang.

Read more: China builds new 'detention facilities' in Xinjiang: study

Evidence of dozens unlawfully killed

Zhao's comments follow the release earlier this month of a damning report into alleged war crimes by Australian special forces soldiers in Afghanista­n from 2005 to 2016.

A four-year inquiry found that there was "credible informatio­n" to substantia­te claims that Australian soldiers unlawfully killed 39 prisoners and civilians.

Read more: Kevin Rudd — 'We need to understand China's global strategy'

Morrison said Australia had establishe­d a "transparen­t and honest" process for investigat­ing the allegation­s. He said this "is what a free, democratic, liberal country does."

Australia had "patiently sought" to address tensions in the relationsh­ip with China, said Morrison, adding that he wanted direct discussion between ministers.

Washington criticized Zhao in March over his tweet about a conspiracy theory that US soldiers may have taken the coronaviru­s to China. He is considered a leading representa­tive of Beijing's new assertive approach to foreign relations.

Read more: Australia's last reporters flee China over 'disturbing' pressure

A rift between the two na

tions has deepened since the

Australian government called for an independen­t inquiry into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Since then, China has imposed tariffs and other restrictio­ns on certain Australian exports. rc/dr (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

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