Chinese Communist party wing mocks India’s Covid crisis on social media

Authored by hindustantimes.com and submitted by QuickyQuail

A social media post by a powerful wing of the Communist Party of China (CPC) had ridiculed the Covid-19 humanitarian crisis unfolding in India, comparing the lighting of funeral pyres at an Indian crematorium with the launch of a Chinese rocket last week. The post has now been deleted.

The Commission for Political and Legal Affairs (CPLA) of the CPC’s central committee published a collage of two images on its Weibo account on Saturday, showing the Chinese rocket launch and the lighting of a pyre in India, side by side.

The caption to the collage reads something along the lines of - “When China sets things on fire vs. when India does it”.

The Weibo post, which has been taken off, was made a day after Chinese President Xi Jinping told Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi that he was concerned about the pandemic situation in India, and had conveyed his condolences.

The CPLA is a powerful organ in the CPC structure and oversees police officers, prosecutors and courts.

It is currently headed by Guo Shengkun, a member of the political bureau of the CPC’s central committee – two of the top decision-making wings in China.

London-based journalist and researcher Mengyu Dong, who tweeted the collage, wrote: “Someone apparently thought it was a good idea to make fun of the latest Covid-19 outbreak in India? An acct (account) affiliated with CCP Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission posted this on Weibo. Caption: When China sets things on fire vs when India does it.”

China Digital Times, which tracks China’s online world, reported: “Official accounts such as the Chinese Police Online and the Tianjin Municipal People’s Procuratorate have posted a picture on several platforms mocking India’s fight against the epidemic: ‘China’s Fire Shine Mountain, India’s Fire Shine Mountain.’”

Responding to a question from HT on the issue – which many Chinese citizens called “insensitive” – the Chinese foreign ministry said the post could not be found on Weibo.

“Regarding the relevant picture mentioned in your question, we currently cannot find it on the relevant Weibo account. It is hoped that the Indian side will pay attention to the Chinese government and mainstream public opinion supporting India’s stance in fighting the epidemic,” the Chinese foreign ministry told HT in a statement.

“What we want to emphasise is that China has been paying close attention to the development of the epidemic situation in India… China is doing its utmost to support India in fighting the new round of the epidemic,” the ministry said.

“In the next few days, more anti-epidemic resources will continue to be sent to India to support India’s anti-epidemic efforts. Many donations and purchases in this area are carried out through unofficial channels. This is enough to show that the Chinese government and all sectors of society are expressing their support for India’s fight against the epidemic with practical actions.”

Chinese official media, too, has a history of mocking Indians during times of bilateral tension.

During the Doklam standoff near the Sikkim border in 2017, news agency Xinhua had released a video with racist overtones that had mocked and parodied Indians.

The video in English ran a little more than three minutes and was titled “7 Sins of India: It’s time for India to confess its seven sins”.

It featured a man with a turban and a fake beard - an apparent attempt at mocking at an Indian Sikh person - speaking in English in the way in which Indians are perceived to speak the language.

Last Thursday, China sent to space a key module for its permanent space station, which it plans to complete by 2022 as part of its ambitious space programme.

zschultz on May 2nd, 2021 at 15:06 UTC »

The exact post: https://chinadigitaltimes.net/chinese/files/2021/05/53234.jpeg

The text: Chinese lit fire vs Indian lit fire chinese ignition vs indian ignition, thx /u/VG-enigmaticsoul

The account belongs to The Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the Communist Party of China, roughly the commission with highest power on legal matters in China.

The post was soon taken down.

The response on Chinese internet is mixed. At first many condemned it(obviously, or it wouldn't be taken down). Now it seems many think it's okay to be this edgy -- after many snarky comment from 'foreigners' when China was suffering from COVID in 2020

nihil81 on May 2nd, 2021 at 14:26 UTC »

I'm an Indian, I lost my dad 2 days ago and 5 other relatives in the last week...

The indian government lost the plot, modi is a massive megalomaniac and an uneducated ignoramus...

My country and it's leaders deserve all the criticism being thrown at them right now from across the planet, even though the government is working overtime in trying to block all criticism and disparaging almost all international reports on the actual status of this...

Having said that, the mockery does not help...not from a friend, not from an adversary... we're completely down and defeated right now with deaths and destruction everywhere but I sincerely request everyone to be at least intellectual in their damning criticism of the indian system, humiliation only tends to bear ill will between nations and peoples... unfortunately human behaviour is such that we all go for "but you said that at that point"...

Maybe we did, and at least some of us are apologizing and asking for some sympathy at this point...

May the readers of this never have to face anything like this ever

Edit - please get yourself vaccinated as soon as possible and follow all corona guidelines...regardless of what your leaders and governments say, time and again it seems like scientists are ones who get their shit right...they will change opinions of course because that's how science works, through slow deliberate improvement unlike governmental dictats which the government has an obligation to follow through because votes

aprilcash on May 2nd, 2021 at 13:33 UTC »

Work of nationalism. Glad it was taken down due to public anger.