Stigmatization of China over coronavirus must be stopped
By Zhong Sheng
The exacerbating COVID-19 pandemic around the world
calls for joint efforts from global countries.
However, some U.S. politicians are showing ill
mentalities and intentionally associating the pandemic with China, stigmatizing
the country by calling the pandemic “Wuhan pneumonia” and “Chinese virus.” Such
practice is extremely irresponsible and immoral, which will not only do nothing
good to the epidemic control in the U.S., but also seriously impede
international solidarity in the battle against the virus. China firmly opposes
and condemns such smears, and urges the U.S. to correct its mistakes and stop the
groundless accusation against China.
Viruses are a common challenge faced by the entire human
race. To associate a virus with specific countries goes against the principles
of international organizations. The World Health Organization (WHO) reiterated that
the origin of the novel coronavirus has not been confirmed yet, and the world
needs to focus on how to curb the virus and avoid stigmatization.
By naming the disease as COVID-19, the WHO hopes to not
associate the term with any region or country, and the names of certain
contagious diseases had once led to stigmatization and other unfavorable
results. The Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) emerged in some Middle
East countries in 2012 triggered broad controversy because it was named after
the region. Base on such experiences and lessons, the WHO and other
institutions proposed in 2015 a guiding principle on naming newly discovered
contagious diseases, advocating to name them with neutral and general terms.
However, such principle is neglected by some U.S.
politicians who only spread stigmatization and create panic, which just reveals
the dark side of their mind.
The origin of the virus is a scientific issue, and to
discover it calls for scientific and professional researches. Now relevant
tracing work is still underway, and no conclusion has been reached yet on the
origin of the virus.
“I think it's also important in terms of looking at the
emergence of any disease; disease can emerge anywhere. Coronaviruses are a
global phenomenon; they exist on a global basis,” said Michael Ryan, Executive
Director of WHO Health Emergencies Programme at a press conference. “It's
really important that we don't start to ascribe blame to geographic origin and
that we look at this in terms of how we respond, how we contain and how we stop
this virus.”
Daniel
Lucey, an adjunct Professor of Medicine-Infectious Diseases at Georgetown
University Medical Center noted that first human infections must have occurred
in November 2019—if not earlier—because there is an incubation time between
infection and symptoms surfacing.
However, the U.S. politicians have already started the
blame game and smearing, and are preventing fact-based discussion, when the
origin of the virus is not confirmed yet. What do they want?
The world must use science to conquer stupidity and
conduct cooperation to eliminate prejudices, especially when global public
health security is facing severe challenges. “This is a time for prudence, not
panic. Science, not stigma. Facts, not fear,” counselled UN chief António
Guterres.
However, certain U.S. politicians are totally brainless
and unscrupulous. They don’t care about facts, and what they do is just repeating
the ridiculous prejudices that have long taken roots in their mind.
Even after Robert Redfield, the director of the American
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention admitted some Americans who
seemingly died from influenza were tested positive for the novel coronavirus in
the posthumous diagnosis, and agreed it was “absolutely wrong” to label the COVID-19
as the “China Virus”, the U.S. politicians are still covering the facts and
smearing China in almost a crazy way.
The pandemic is a test for countries’ governance
capability, and also reflects their performance in international cooperation.
The preoccupied problems of the U.S. in politics and health care have been
exposed, and the country must face up to them and fill the shortages to
safeguard the health of its people.
And yes, the American public are disappointed. Stephen
Morrison, senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies and director of its Global Health Policy Center recently questioned the
U.S. government: “The Chinese bought us a month of time to prepare ourselves by
imposing these astonishing and draconian measures. Unfortunately, we didn’t
make good use of that time and now we’re heading into a very dangerous
situation.”
The
Chinese government has always shared information with the U.S. Chinese experts
shared therapeutic plans with their American peers, and Chinese enterprises are
also trying to help the U.S. to fight the virus.
However,
these still failed to stop the U.S. politicians from attacking and smearing
China, as it is a way for them to divert public anger. They are returning evil
for good and undermining the international cooperation on combating the
pandemic, which is totally irresponsible for people’s health.
The
virus is still rampant, and the American politicians are advised to blame and
smear less, focus on the business of their own country, and play a constructive
role in safeguarding global public health security.
(Zhong
Sheng is a pen name often used by People’s Daily to express its views on
foreign policy.)
Stigmatization of China over coronavirus must be stopped
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