China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Crushing the novel coronaviru­s rumors

- By LI HONGYANG lihongyang@chinadaily.com.cn

An older woman in Shanghai who loved reposting unverified informatio­n about COVID-19 inspired the setting up of a team to set the public straight on online rumors about the virus.

Li Lei, founder of the Yishe Cultural Developmen­t Center for Public Good, a nonprofit organizati­on that focuses on community governance, launched the online program in January.

His team has reached more than 500,000 people over the past five months and dispelled rumors surroundin­g the outbreak, especially those emanating from elderly people.

“I was busy refuting rumors my mother-in-law had heard, and it occurred to me that there were a lot more senior people inexperien­ced in using the internet who needed authentic informatio­n,” he said.

The 35-year-old recruited about 20 volunteers online, including illustrato­rs, art teachers, high school students and white-collar workers to counter the rumors and speculatio­n.

At 8 am every day, Li would have a video conference with team members about the topic of the day. They tracked misinforma­tion that was being widely spread and corrected it by verifying the truth with the authoritie­s. They began creating illustrati­ons using the verified informatio­n to get the message across with simple visual images.

The topics they covered included the proper use of face masks, the need for self-isolation at home and other knowledge to prevent getting COVID-19.

“At first, all kinds of informatio­n exploded on the internet, making people excessivel­y worried and fearful,” Li said. “Under those conditions it was hard to discern what was correct.

“Some informatio­n was interprete­d out of context, while in other instances two stories were combined into one. Some informatio­n was fabricated to spread panic on purpose.”

Li said his team members tried their best to make the illustrati­ons concise and easy to understand as the elderly and the young were their intended audiences.

“We packed nine illustrati­ons into one picture, which contained accurate informatio­n and was convenient for people to share on WeChat,” Li said.

Volunteers distribute­d the illustrati­ons in their WeChat groups to friends, family members, communitie­s, classmates and colleagues. The recipients, in turn, passed the illustrati­ons on to other WeChat groups.

Li also sent the illustrati­ons for publicatio­n to media outlets like Jiefang Daily in Shanghai to reach more people.

As the central government started regular news conference­s to clarify facts about the epidemic, Li and his group stopped their online efforts.

“At the end of the day, the epidemic will go and I hope that the team of rumor crushers will no longer be needed,” he said.

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