National Post (National Edition)

Action star Cena issues apology on Taiwan

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U.S. actor and former World Wrestling Entertainm­ent Inc. champion John Cena apologized for describing Taiwan as a country in a promotiona­l video for his latest movie, saying sorry in Mandarin after the comments triggered a backlash in China.

Cena made the apology in a clip posted Tuesday on his official Weibo account, a Chinese social media platform like Twitter. He had earlier this month indicated that Taiwan was a country in a video promoting his film “Fast & Furious 9,” according to China's state-run Global Times newspaper. “I made a mistake. I must say now that, very very very importantl­y, I love and respect China and Chinese people,” Cena said in Chinese in the video, without elaboratin­g further. The apology video triggered further anger on Chinese social media, where users denounced Cena for not stating that Taiwan was part of China. Beijing argues that democratic­ally run Taiwan is part of its territory, and has in recent years increased diplomatic pressure on the Taipei government and other nations that recognize its legitimacy. The apology also drew flak in the U.S., where critics — including Republican­s and conservati­ve media — slammed the star for bowing to China. Tom Cotton, a Republican senator from Arkansas, described the move as “pathetic.” Cena is the latest high-profile westerner to come under fire for publicly crossing China's political lines, amid a boycott of some U.S. and Europe-based brands that had taken a stand against the treatment of Muslim Uyghurs in China's far west Xinjiang region.

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John Cena

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