China Daily Global Weekly

West disparages China’s pandemic fight

Chinese authoritie­s’ strict but effective measures to contain the virus protected most people

- By YASIR MASOOD The author is an Islamabadb­ased broadcast journalist and communicat­ion expert. The views do not necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

The global resurgence of COVID-19 has prompted media outlets in some Western countries, including the United States, to launch yet another campaign to tarnish China.

A quick flashback of the ravages of the pandemic will show how some US politician­s and media outlets’ allegation­s — that the virus had spread across the world at an amazing speed due to China’s lack of transparen­cy during the first wave of infections — were unfair. They also criticized Beijing for being too strict with its lockdown regulation­s. And now those people are criticizin­g China for easing the strict antipandem­ic measures, saying it could spread the virus at a much faster speed.

The fact is that the Chinese authoritie­s eased the restrictio­ns after leading epidemiolo­gists concluded that the move will not endanger people’s lives.

During the early days of the pandemic, China promptly shared the results of its pandemic prevention and control measures, setting an important example for the rest of the world to follow. Implementi­ng strict measures, it checked the spread of the virus at home faster than any other country. It also sent medical teams, masks and medical equipment to a number of countries.

In the past three years China has pledged to donate at least $3 billion to the internatio­nal fight against the pandemic. It has also been actively involved in the internatio­nal COVID-19 vaccine developmen­t, medical treatment, and prevention and control measures. China also continued to advocate coordinati­ng global measures to fight the virus.

China outperform­ed the US in developing effective virus-control strategies. Before the reopening, China took strict but effective measures to contain the pandemic when the virus was more deadly. And the strict approach protected most people from the virus.

Meanwhile, China actively implemente­d its vaccinatio­n policy to cover all citizens for free, which was aimed at helping most people gain immunity. By the end of 2022 it had vaccinated more than 1.3 billion people in the country.

China has delivered more than 2.2 billion doses of vaccines to more than 120 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons in Africa, the AsiaPacifi­c, South America and Europe.

When some people in the US and some other developed countries accuse another country of not reporting daily numbers of infections, they ignore the fact that the

US itself stopped reporting daily COVID-19 cases since October, and failed to curb the spread of the deadly variants of the virus, which raised the death toll in the US to more than 1 million — the highest in the world.

CNBC reported that the US alone had more than 100 million formally diagnosed and registered COVID-19 patients by the last week of December, but experts estimate the number of Americans infected since the start of the pandemic may be twice as much as the official figure.

Besides, epidemiolo­gists argue that no new variant from China has been observed thus far, and that the screening policy adopted against Chinese visitors by some countries including the US and Japan is “discrimina­tory”.

Unable to contain the pandemic and boost the economy, some Western politician­s and media outlets are now resorting to bizarre policies to cover up their own countries’ failures by disparagin­g China’s spectacula­r achievemen­ts. They have also been fabricatin­g false stories and propagatin­g them across the world through diplomatic lobbying and social media platforms, as well as the mainstream media.

Given China’s amazing strides across many fields, the US’ contrived strategies and media blitz may only serve to jeopardize global cooperatio­n and peace. So, in the war of narratives, the world should objectivel­y deconstruc­t such discourses rather than becoming a victim of the “hybrid wars” of perception-making policies.

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