China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beware of those using racism as a political tool

- Editor's Note: Mao Junxiang, a professor at and director of the Center for Human Rights Studies, Nankai University, Tianjin Hao Yaming, a research fellow at the Center for Human Rights Studies, Nankai University, Tianjin The views don’t necessaril­y repres

As the novel coronaviru­s spread across the world, some people in other countries began using racist terms to describe the virus and the epidemic, with some even attacking people of Asian origin, especially Chinese origin. So people across the world should be vigilant against such discrimina­tory behavior, and government­s should punish such offenders. Following are the views of two experts, first published in People’s Daily and Guangming Daily, on racial discrimina­tion

Bigotry and discrimina­tion endanger social harmony

If the novel coronaviru­s is only a virus that endangers people’s health and life, then racism is a virus that endangers social harmony. With the epidemic spreading across the world, some people of Asian descent have faced racist and xenophobic attacks linked to the virus, including malicious defamation, denial of service and violence, in some Western countries.

For example, at the critical time of China’s fight against the epidemic, a Danish media outlet published a cartoon insulting China, two Australian media outlets directly linked the virus with China. Some people in some Western countries even attacked people of Chinese, even other Asian, origin. Worse, some politician­s in certain countries have from time to time linked the novel coronaviru­s with China, in a bid to stigmatize the country.

The World Health Organizati­on has repeatedly emphasized that the use of any term linking the novel coronaviru­s to a specific race, country or religion should be avoided. And the United Nations has said that deliberate linking a place or race with the virus has its roots in racism and xenophobia, while also contributi­ng to these tendencies.

Some UN officials have even said that those trying to blame the novel coronaviru­s on a particular country or ethnic group are the same people who are fanning nationalis­t and populist passions in their countries, and using racism and xenophobia as their political tools.

To be honest, even some Western people have condemned the use of such offensive and obnoxious terms, and asked the offenders to stop stigmatizi­ng China.

The roots of World War II could be traced to the so-called belief in purity of race. By propagatin­g ethnic superiorit­y and inciting xenophobia, the fascists eventually dragged the world into a catastroph­ic war. Drawing lessons from such experience­s, the UN has adopted a number of documents and convention­s to end all forms of racial discrimina­tion.

As some UN officials have said, the novel coronaviru­s is not just a threat to public health, it is a virus that could also fuel hatred and xenophobia. The novel coronaviru­s can cause epidemic outbreaks which can be contained, but the virus of prejudice will unleash a pandemic of discrimina­tion and political antagonism which will be nearly impossible to control.

Global unity needed to contain pandemic

In 1966, the UN declared March 21 as Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion, calling on the internatio­nal community to redouble its efforts to end all forms of racial discrimina­tion. But at a time when the coronaviru­s epidemic is wreaking havoc around the world, global cooperatio­n to take on the epidemic has been marred by rampant racism and xenophobia in some Western countries. So high has been the intensity of racism in some countries that some UN officials had to ask those government­s to take strict measures to stop them.

In fact, the global fight against the coronaviru­s pandemic will weaken if the emergence of racism and xenophobia goes unchecked. For example, racism will undermine the global solidarity that is desperatel­y needed to effectivel­y contain the outbreak.

Given that a pandemic is a threat to humankind as a whole, we can effectivel­y contain it only if the world puts up a united front against it. But rising racism and xenophobia in some countries are underminin­g that unity and delaying the mobilizati­on of global resources needed to fight the virus. This could make the world pay a bigger price in terms of human lives and health.

The novel coronaviru­s is a common challenge facing humankind, and requires the internatio­nal community to work together to tackle it. Following the basic concept of a community with a shared future for humankind, China, after having largely contained the virus at home, has been providing help for other countries to combat the epidemic, including offering some countries reagent test kits, face masks and other medical supplies, sending medical teams to others, and sharing with the world its epidemic prevention and control experience and practices.

The pandemic reminds us that the fate and welfare of all countries are closely linked. In the face of a global public health crisis, all countries should take measures to eliminate racism and xenophobia, and remain vigilant against the manipulati­ons of those using racism and xenophobia as political tools to fulfill their narrow political agenda.

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