The Citizen (KZN)

China trumpets Wuhan efforts

COVID-19: BEIJING WANTS TO SAY ‘WE HANDLED IT’

- Wuhan

Officials lavish state media coverage of a ‘reborn’ city.

China is recasting Wuhan as a heroic coronaviru­s victim and trying to throw doubt on the pandemic’s origin story as it aims to seize the narrative at a time of growing global distrust of Beijing.

The PR blitz plays out daily in comments by Chinese officials and lavish state media coverage of a “reborn” Wuhan that trumpets China’s epidemic-control efforts and economic recovery while the United States struggles.

The drive peaked in the past week as Chinese primary schools welcomed back pupils with considerab­le fanfare and Wuhan hosted executives from dozens of multinatio­nals, from Panasonic to Dow and Nokia, on a highly choreograp­hed tour of the central Chinese city.

“There are few places in the world today where you don’t need a mask and can gather,” a Chinese official, Lin Songtian, told the executives, implying that Wuhan was one of those places.

“This testifies to Wuhan’s triumph over the virus and that (the city) is back in business.”

Lost in this retelling, however, is that a wet market in Wuhan is widely believed to be ground zero for the pandemic.

China’s foreign minister suggested on 28 August during a European outreach trip that the virus might not have emerged in China. The drive indicates China recognises Covid-19’s damage to its brand and wants to leverage its relatively successful recovery to counter growing internatio­nal challenges, analysts said.

China faces foreign bitterness over the virus and an initial cover-up attempt by Wuhan officials, plus criticism of Beijing’s tightening grip on Hong Kong and generally more aggressive internatio­nal posture.

“Beijing wants the narrative to be: we handled it, we can help you handle it and (hopefully) we’re the first to have a vaccine that works,” said Kelsey Broderick, Asia analyst with Eurasia Group.

“That’s really the only way China can come out ahead of the idea that a wet market in Wuhan started this crisis.” – AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa