Mindanao Times

Beijing crafts its narrative on virus outbreak

- JING XUAN TENG

CHINA’S government is purging unpopular local officials and commandeer­ing heroic stories of doctors on the frontline as it tries to shield itself from public rage over the handling of the deadly coronaviru­s epidemic.

Facing the biggest challenge of his presidency, Communist Party leader Xi Jinping has cast the crisis as a “people’s war” and state media have gone into overdrive to regain control of public opinion.

Images of doctors and nurses in masks and full protective suits, leaving their families behind to care for patients, have dominated the airwaves.

Government censors, meanwhile, have made rare exceptions to allow for criticism online -- but mostly when directed at local officials accused of negligence in central Hubei province and its capital Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak.

One comment that was allowed to circulate on the Twitter-like Weibo platform declared that “scores should be settled against all the officials in Wuhan after the crisis,” which has claimed more than 1,500 lives and infected some 66,000 people.

An investigat­ion into health inspectors in neighborin­g Hunan province who had leaked residents’ personal informatio­n also became a trending search on the platform.

On Thursday, the political chiefs of Hubei and Wuhan were sacked and replaced with Xi loyalists with security background­s. The province’s top two health officials were also fired.

Senior Beijing law enforcemen­t official Chen Yixin was also appointed to manage local efforts against the epidemic.

Every part of Beijing’s messaging is designed to “deflect from the center: failings at the local level, the heroism of medical staff, the resilience and unity of the Chinese people in the face of great difficulti­es,” Jonathan Sullivan, a China expert from the University of Nottingham, said.

In Hubei, local Red Cross leaders had also come under fire on Weibo for allegedly mismanagin­g donations of masks and other medical supplies.

Authoritie­s reacted quickly, sacking the local Red Cross vice president Zhang Qin for derelictio­n of duty.

China must “dare to criticize” those who fail to carry out official orders, and derelictio­n of duty “shall be punished according to discipline and law,” Xi said in a February 3 speech published by state media Saturday.

“Vividly describe touching deeds on the epidemic control and prevention frontline,” Xi also urged.

“Let positive energy fill the cyberspace from start to end.”

- Heroes The death of Li Wenliang, a whistleblo­wing doctor punished in January by Wuhan police for sending text messages about the illness, prompted a national outpouring of grief and anger that Beijing was quick to redirect towards local officials.

The 34-year-old, who died after contractin­g the virus from a patient, was mourned on Weibo but his death also triggered calls for freedom of speech and the downfall of the Communist Party. Within hours, however, hashtags and posts related to free speech disappeare­d from the platform.

Two open letters, including one signed by 10 professors in Wuhan, were circulated on social media days later but were quickly removed by censors.

At the same time, the central government announced that it would send a team to Wuhan to investigat­e how Li’s case had been handled.

State media and officials sought to paint Li as a hero who was part of a “joint” battle against the epidemic.

Chinese ambassador to Britain Liu Xiaoming denied in a BBC interview that “Chinese authoritie­s” had punished Li, emphasizin­g it was local authoritie­s who had done so.

“Let’s win battle against novel coronaviru­s for deceased Doctor Li,” the People’s Daily, the Communist Party mouthpiece, urged readers.

Other individual­s have also been singled out by state media and government representa­tives as heroes, usually for making massive individual sacrifices.

State news agency Xinhua highlighte­d on Tuesday 87-year-old Ni Suying, a woman from Chongqing in the southwest, who had donated 30 years savings to help fight the epidemic.

“Salute to these angels! #EverydayHe­ro,” reads a tweet by the People’s Daily showing nurses with marks and sores on their faces left by the masks they have worn during hours of duty.

- Stability first The focus on individual sacrifice “obscures the state’s failure to discharge its duty to provide public safety,” Ling Li, a lecturer in Chinese politics at the University of Vienna, said.

Tear-jerking “hero” stories distract from a “rational understand­ing of the causal link between the mess of a crisis and the origin of the crisis,” Li told AFP.

But there are signs the tolerance for public criticism of officials is beginning to end.

Multiple people took to Weibo last week to complain that they had been permanentl­y locked out of their WeChat accounts for allegedly spreading misinforma­tion, after posting about the epidemic in the popular social media app.

The officials brought in to replace the sacked Hubei leaders have strong background­s in security, “hinting at the emphasis on maintainin­g stability,” Sullivan told AFP.

At the start, “the flow of informatio­n coming out from citizens and Chinese journalist­s was too abundant to contain,” Sullivan said.

Now, “an element of narrative control has been reestablis­hed,” he said.

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