China Daily (Hong Kong)

Coronaviru­s not China’s Chernobyl

- Lan Shunzheng The author is a research fellow at the Charhar Institute and a member of the Chinese Institute of Command and Control. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

At a time when China is trying to contain the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, some Western media outlets have exposed their antiChina bias by claiming the situation is “China’s Chernobyl”.

The nuclear disaster in Chernobyl, Ukraine, in the then Soviet Union in 1986 remains the worst nuclear accident till date. It was caused by the meltdown of the No 4 light water graphite moderated reactor in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

Apart from the initial casualty of more than 30 people and hundreds being hospitaliz­ed for radiation exposure, tens of thousands of people were exposed to leaked radiation and the disaster resulted in tens of billions of dollars in direct and indirect economic losses. Radioactiv­e dust and cloud from Chernobyl traveled from Ukraine to the then western Soviet Union, mainly Belarus, all the way to Europe. Ultimately an area around the nuclear plant — with a radius of 30 kilometers — was declared an exclusion zone.

Also, the Soviet authoritie­s didn’t immediatel­y inform the residents around the Chernobyl plant or the internatio­nal community about the serious consequenc­es of the nuclear accident. The disaster raised global censure, especially because many in the internatio­nal community believed the Soviet authoritie­s didn’t appropriat­ely respond to the emergency.

By contrast, China didn’t know the consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s outbreak at the outset, particular­ly because of the local government’s slow response to the epidemic in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, in the early stages.

But order was establishe­d after the central government realized what was happening, it immediatel­y implemente­d strict measures to contain the epidemic by setting quarantine norms, mobilizing the national medical corps, ordering the local government and health department to swing into action, and building two makeshift hospitals in about two weeks. And all the while, China maintained transparen­cy as far as releasing informatio­n and updating data on the epidemic were concerned.

So, by comparing the coronaviru­s outbreak to the Chernobyl disaster, some Western media outlets are trying to create panic across the world and giving a bad name to China’s political institutio­nal measures when they should be focusing on working together to contain the epidemic.

It’s a pity that their Cold War mentality is prompting some Western media outlets, especially those in the United States, to hype up the epidemic as part of their “China threat” fallacy even in these trying times. A report, titled “Rising to the China Challenge: Renewing American Competitiv­eness in the Indo-Pacific”, released on Jan 28 by the Center for a New American Security, US think tank, said Western government­s and companies should consider competing with China by, for instance, attacking what it perceives as the problems with Chinese institutes.

Besides, US State Secretary Mike Pompeo tried to derail the cooperatio­n between China and countries such as Ukraine and Kazakhstan during his visit to the two countries on Jan 31 and Feb 2.

Some US officials continue to claim China poses a threat to the world, in order to fulfill their narrow political goals, even as China has intensifie­d its fight against the epidemic. US Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross, for example, said on Jan 30 that the epidemic might help jobs return to the US.

Government­s should accord top priority to cooperatio­n at all times, particular­ly when a country is fighting a deadly disease outbreak. But some Western media outlets and politician­s have been violating this long establishe­d global rule.

Since China is the world’s second-largest economy, the novel coronaviru­s outbreak in the country has already impacted the global economy. For example, global stock markets have been volatile, oil prices have dropped because China’s demand for oil has declined and exports of auto components from China have been restricted, and Nissan decided to shut down several production lines.

Yet China has taken effective measures to contain the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. And new cases have shown a declining trend, even as the World Health Organizati­on has warned the risks of novel coronaviru­s transmissi­on beyond China might cause serious global problems.

In short, the epidemic is by no means China’s Chernobyl and the internatio­nal community should work together to contain the epidemic as soon as possible so as to strengthen global security and stability.

In short, the epidemic is by no means China’s Chernobyl and the internatio­nal community should work together to contain the epidemic as soon as possible so as to strengthen global security and stability.

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