• Anti-semitic comments flood China’s censored internet after Hamas attac

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 9 12:38:40 2024
    XPost: uk.legal, soc.culture.jewish, alt.news-media
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    Antisemitic remarks have flooded China’s heavily censored online
    platforms and the Israeli government's Chinese social media accounts
    since the Hamas attacks on Israel.

    Scores of online Chinese commentators and netizens quickly rallied for
    Gaza after the Hamas attacks began Oct. 7, accusing Israel of
    oppressing Palestinians for decades and saying Israel deserves the
    bloodshed.

    "In the past, Germany persecuted you. Now, you persecute Palestinians.
    In this world, do not force others to the corner because you would
    only be digging your own grave," wrote Ziwu Xiashi, one of the biggest nationalist commentators with 1 million followers on Weibo, China's
    equivalent of X, formerly Twitter.

    Although the Chinese government has called on both sides to end the
    hostilities and condemned "all violence and attacks on civilians,"
    Beijing has long been a friend of the Palestinian cause.

    It recognized the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1964 and
    Palestinian sovereignty in 1988 before establishing full diplomatic
    relations with the Palestinian Authority in 1989. And, during a state
    visit to Saudi Arabia in 2022, Chinese President Xi Jinping voiced
    frustration over the "historical injustice" suffered by Palestinians
    and expressed China's support for the establishment of a Palestinian
    state on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

    "It is not possible to continue the historical injustice suffered by
    the Palestinians," the Chinese president said at the opening of the Riyadh-Gulf-Chinese Summit for Cooperation and Development in Saudi
    Arabia.

    In the wake of the attacks, official Chinese state media has blamed
    the U.S. for not playing a constructive role in defusing the tension.

    “While the Biden administration warned any group against taking
    advantage of the #Israeli-Palestinian conflict, if any group stands
    any chance to exploit the conflict and profit from the violence, it
    will probably be the #US military-industrial complex,” the Global
    Times wrote on X.

    But on China’s internet, instead of echoing criticism of the U.S,
    nationalist commentators and netizens have directed their ire at the
    Jewish people, which many netizens believe is the Chinese government
    signaling where it really stands on the conflict. Or as one poster
    wrote, "Based on how this trending topic was arranged, now I see where
    our country really stands."

    "Jews always talk about how badly they were treated during World War
    II and throughout history. But you can't ask why. Otherwise, you are
    called a racist or that you envy their money," said the username of
    Rabbit head senior Zhang Tiegen in a Weibo post with over 2,000 likes. "Actually, before the Holocaust during World War II, Jews' reputation
    was down in the ghetto throughout Europe."

    "Wherever the Jews have gone, they have always been massacred. There's
    a reason why. You only love Jews when they are not in your area,"
    wrote online commentator Vincent.

    When asked about the antisemitic comments on Chinese social media, the
    Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C., referred VOA Mandarin to remarks
    made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman on Wednesday.

    "I'd like to reiterate that to end the cycle of conflict between
    Palestine and Israel, it is essential to restart the peace talks,
    implement the two-state solution and seek a comprehensive and proper
    settlement of the Palestine question through political means at an
    early date, so that the parties' legitimate concerns can be taken care
    of," spokesperson Wang Wenbin said in the daily briefing.

    Wang Yaqiu, research director for China, Hong Kong and Taiwan at
    Freedom House, told VOA Mandarin, "We can't blame the Chinese
    government for all of the antisemitism on the Chinese internet, but
    the government contributed to it by actively promoting stereotypes and
    false narratives."

    Carice Witte, founder and executive director of the Sino-Israel Global
    Network and Academic Leadership, a think tank in Israel, told VOA
    Mandarin, "It comes from not having access to good information. It is
    not — I would not say that in China — real antisemitism or a hatred of
    Israel or the Jews. It is a kind of version of brainwashing that
    happens when you don't really know really what's going on and you're
    only fed one side of the story. It's understandable."

    Netizens have also filled the comment section of posts made by the
    Israeli government on Weibo with criticism and attacks, forcing the
    account run by the Israeli Embassy in China to close the comment
    section.

    When Israel's consulate in Guangzhou posted a report of a Chinese
    Israeli woman being abducted by Hamas militants, netizens accused the
    consulate of trying to drive a wedge between Chinese and Palestinians
    citizens.

    "Impressive divisive tactic," one popular comment wrote. "Is that girl
    even Chinese?"

    Under a different news post about the woman, a comment with over
    10,000 likes asked, "If she thinks she's Israeli, this has nothing to
    do with us. Why even post it on China's internet?"

    The comments were at odds with a posting by the Chinese Embassy in
    Israel, which said, "Noa was kidnapped by Hamas terrorists when
    attending a peace music festival in southern Israel. She was dragged
    from Israel to Gaza. She is a daughter, a sister and a friend."

    Many commentators and influential accounts brought up the death of Du
    Zhaoyu, a Chinese military officer killed in a bombing conducted by
    the Israeli Air Force in 2006 while on United Nations duty in Lebanon.

    Other comments praised “Little Mustache” as many Chinese people refer
    to Germany’s Adolf Hitler, who was responsible for the deaths of
    millions of Jews during World II, according to ThisIsWenhao, the X
    account identified as that of VOA Mandarin journalist Wenhao Ma, who
    collects and interprets Weibo posts and reported this piece.

    "It's really the fault of Little Mustache," wrote a netizen. "If he
    had burned all of them (Jews), we wouldn't have this much trouble."

    Online antisemitism in China didn't appear out of nowhere. For years,
    there have been conspiracy theories about Jews circulating on China's
    internet, claiming that the Jews have, through organizations like
    Freemasonry, secretly controlled the U.S. government and influenced
    the world.

    A Weibo account run by China's state-owned CCTV claimed the Jewish
    community dominates U.S. finance and politics and that the issue of
    Israel has often been a deciding factor in every U.S. election. The
    post has since been deleted.

    At one point after the Hamas attacks, the hashtag "the 3% Jewish
    population in the U.S. controls over 70% of American wealth" became
    one of the top trending topics on heavily censored Weibo.

    Adrianna Zhang contributed to this report.


    https://www.voanews.com/a/antisemitic-comments-flood-china-s-censored-internet-after-hamas-attack-/7307404.html

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