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Anti-China sentiment spreads around the globe along with coronavirus


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Anti-China sentiment spreads around the globe along with coronavirus

By Stanley Widianto and Khanh VU

 

2020-01-30T161206Z_3_LYNXMPEG0T133_RTROPTP_4_CHINA-HEALTH-VIETNAM.JPG

FILE PHOTO: A sign which says the shop is not accepting Chinese customers because of the corona virus is seen on the front door of a nail bar in the island of Phu Quoc, Vietnam, January 27, 2020. Sophie Carsten/Handout via REUTERS

 

JAKARTA/HANOI (Reuters) - The coronavirus outbreak has stoked a wave of anti-China sentiment around the globe, from shops barring entry to Chinese tourists, online vitriol mocking the country's exotic meat trade and surprise health checks on foreign workers.

 

The virus, which originated in China, has spread to more than a dozen countries, many of them in Southeast Asia which has sensitive relations with China amid concerns about Beijing's vast infrastructure spending and political clout in the region and sovereignty disputes in the South China Sea.

 

Authorities and schools in Toronto, Canada, were moved to warn against discrimination towards Chinese Canadians, while in Europe there was anecdotal evidence of Chinese residents facing prejudice in the street, and hostile newspaper headlines.

 

"Orientalist assumptions plus political distrust plus health concerns are a pretty powerful combination," said Charlotte Setijadi, and anthropologist who teaches at Singapore Management University.

 

Chinese authorities have said the virus emerged from a market selling illegally traded wildlife, giving rise to widespread social media mocking of China's demand for exotic delicacies and ingredients for traditional medicine.

 

"Stop eating bats," said one Twitter user in Thailand, the top destination for Chinese tourists. "Not surprising that the Chinese are making new diseases," another Thai user posted alongside a video clip that showed a man eating raw meat.

 

"Because your country is beginning (to) spread disease...we do not accept to serve the guest from China," read a sign in English outside the Danang Riverside hotel in the central Vietnamese city of the same name. Authorities later told the hotel to remove the sign, its manager said in a Facebook post.

 

Vietnam, which was under Chinese occupation centuries ago and contests Beijing's sweeping maritime claims in the South China Sea, has particularly fraught relations with China.

 

But it is not alone in the region.

 

Over 60% of respondents to a poll of Southeast Asian officials, academics and other professionals said in a survey this month that they distrusted China. Nearly 40% said they thought China was "a revisionist power and intends to turn Southeast Asia into its sphere of influence". The survey did not mention the virus.

 

The Chinese government said it was determined to contain an epidemic it called a "common challenge facing mankind".

 

"Prejudice and narrow-minded words are no good at all," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

 

TRAVEL BANS

Many countries have imposed visa restrictions on travellers from Hubei province - the epicentre of the virus - while some airlines have suspended all direct flights to mainland China.

 

But this is not enough for hundreds of thousands of people in South Korea and Malaysia who have signed online petitions urging authorities to ban Chinese from visiting their countries.

 

In an unusual move, Samal Island in the southern Philippines on Thursday banned not just tourists from China but from all countries affected by the coronavirus to the popular beach spot.

 

China's boom in outbound tourism has created a pattern of international travel unprecedented in human history and driven the growth of businesses to serve Chinese travellers around the world. From a trickle in the 1980s, Chinese tourist numbers grew to estimates of more than 160 million in 2019.

 

In France, whose capital Paris is a major draw for Chinese visitors and which has a significant Chinese population, local Asians created a Twitter hashtag #Jenesuispasunvirus ("I am not a virus") to report abuse, especially in public transport.

 

Sun Lay Tan, a 41-year-old manager in the creative industries sector, said the man seated next to him in his Paris subway ride changed seat then put a scarf over his mouth.

 

"That was really shocking," said Tan, who was born in France of Chinese and Cambodian origin. "I felt really stigmatised".

 

(Reporting by Stanley Widianto in Jakarta, Khanh Vu and Phuong Nguyen in Hanoi, Chayut Setboonsarng in Bangkok, Karen Lema in Manila, Thu Thu Aung in Yangon, Joseph Sipalan in Kuala Lumpur and Josh Smith in Seoul; Caroline Pailliez in Paris and Ben Blanchard; Writing by John Geddie in Singapore; Editing by Nick Macfie)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-01-31
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25 minutes ago, impulse said:

I lived in China for 10+ years and still have an apartment there.  I was 14 hours from hopping a plane to attend a trade show in Beijing this week when I got a message that said it had been cancelled. 

 

I like the people, but I still get the willies every time I'm at a group function and there's a guy across the table coughing and hacking, then dipping his chopsticks into the community bowl we're all eating from.  That's the custom, and if you don't eat from the shared dishes, you go hungry.  I don't care if it's exotic food or not.  It's not hygienic, and I guaranty you that it played a huge role in the rapid spread of the coronavirus. 

 

They got away from shared dishes for a few months during the SARS epidemic, but that was soon forgotten.

 

Let me assure you that there are no Chinese custom that you must share the food that a rude Chinese has dipped his chopstick. That will be frowned upon by the Chinese. They know hygiene as much as you. It is normal for the restaurant to provide extra chopstick for noddles or vegetable that diners used for picking the food from community bowl. Or a spoon for soup with extra small bowls for individual consumption. What is Chinese custom is that you finish all the food that you take lest it is considered rude. 

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3 minutes ago, simon43 said:

 

 

 

LoL, I just wet my pants with laughter!!  Can you please explain how hacking up big green sputum lumps in the street is hygienic?

 

Just helping out the ill-informed. Spitting is banned in China, frowned upon the people and happen everywhere is the world. Now clean up your pants, 

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3 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

So you're saying I got it wrong for over 10 years that I lived there?  That we weren't all dipping into the shared dishes?  Because I'd have sworn that we were.  And that's not really a hard thing to differentiate.

 

 

You said it’s a custom and I corrected you. Does this still happen, bet it does everywhere in the world. Next time if that happen, you can single out that rude Chinese and the other diners will praise you for that. 

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3 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

You said it’s a custom and I corrected you. Does this still happen, bet it does everywhere in the world. Next time if that happen, you can single out that rude Chinese and the other diners will praise you for that. 

 

How do you define "custom", then?    'Cause I define it as what happens on a daily basis.  If it's 9 times out of 10, that's a custom.

 

And I never singled out Chinese, in China, doing what's customary.  That would be rude.

 

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Just now, impulse said:

 

How do you define "custom", then?    'Cause I define it as what happens on a daily basis.  If it's 9 times out of 10, that's a custom.

 

 

but sometimes customs are also called "lack of education"

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