The Star Malaysia

China gasps at grad’s ‘airy’ speech in US

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BEIJING: A young Chinese woman has drawn criticism on social media after unfavourab­ly comparing her homeland’s air and politics to those in the United States during her graduation speech at an American university.

Speaking at the University of Maryland, Yang Shuping said that coming to the US had been a breath of “fresh air” after growing up in China.

“The air was so sweet and fresh and utterly luxurious,” she said, in a video of the speech posted on YouTube.

“The moment I inhaled and exhaled outside the airport, I felt free,” she continued, drawing a parallel between China’s notorious air pollution and its similarly choking restrictio­ns on political speech.

The reaction was swift and brutal, with comments in Chinese and English telling her to stay in America.

Posts related to the video on the Chinese micro blogging site Weibo had received over 56 million views yesterday.

“People like this, with biased opinions and broken English, should never be allowed to speak publicly as a commenceme­nt speaker,” said one remark posted under the YouTube video. The site is banned in China.

Commenters who said they hailed from Yang’s hometown Kunming accused her of lying about the air quality in the major metropolis in the city’s southwest, with many claiming it was as clean as Washington’s, near her university’s campus.

“The only explanatio­n for her wearing a mask in Kunming is that she’s ugly,” said one commenter on Weibo, referring to her comment that she had worn one to protect herself from the bad air.

Air quality readings in Kunming were as high as 107, four times the World Health Organisati­on’s recommende­d maximum exposure for a 24-hour period.

In Washington, they were at two yesterday.

Thinly veiled criticisms of the speech appeared in state-owned media Tuesday, quoting some of the vicious responses.

An article titled “Chinese student at University of Maryland slammed for biased commenceme­nt speech” was ranked as the most viewed story on the English-language newspaper and website of the People’s Daily, the Communist Party mouthpiece.

As the criticism piled up, Yang, who studied psychology and theatre, apologised according to an article in the state-owned tabloid the Global Times, a reaction that seemingly proved her point that there is little space in China for critical speech.

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