BEIJING
(AP) — First, videos of rude foreigners
went viral in Chinese cyberspace, then aBeijing
police crackdown on visitors without valid visas drew fervent
applause, and finally, a state TV host urged his countrymen to toss out the
“foreign trash.”
The
latest anti-foreigner stirring in China has put the spotlight on outsiders at a
time when its leaders would welcome any distraction from the slowing economy, a
high-level political scandal and a blind activist’s daring flight into U.S.
custody.
The
government also has exchanged bellicose rhetoric with the Philippines in a
standoff over remote islands while state-run newspapers have attacked the American
ambassador over the U.S. involvement in the case of activist Chen Guangcheng.
China’s
leaders and official media frequently blame foreigners for domestic woes,
tapping into a nationalism fed by steady reminders of affronts at the hands of
foreigners over the past two centuries.
As the
country prepares for a once-a-decade leadership transition this year — already
marred by the downfall of a top leader amid a murder investigation against his
wife — the government is more sensitive than ever about foreign interference.
“This
is an unsettled time in China because of the political transition,” said James
McGregor, a senior counselor for consulting firm APCO Worldwide.
“So, I
think they genuinely worry about foreigners agitating because they always turn
to ‘It must be the foreigners’ fault’ when things go wrong,” said McGregor,
also a former chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China.
Earlier
this month, an amateur video con China’s Twitter-like sites showed a British
man allegedly sexually assaulting a Chinese woman near a Beijing mall and then
being beaten up by Chinese men.
State
TV broadcast the video for several days, and police said the man was
apprehended.
Later,
Beijing authorities announced a three-month crackdown on foreigners without
valid visas or work documents, illustrating its campaign with a graphic of a
clenched fist. Microbloggers called the move overdue and urged police to round
up foreign drug dealers.
Into
this waded TV personality Yang Rui, host of an English-language talk show on
state CCTV, who ranted on a microblog last week that the police should arrest
the “foreign hoodlums and protect innocent girls.”
Yang
railed against the “unemployed people from America and Europe who come to China
to take our money, traffic in humans and spread heresy to encourage
emigration.”
He
exhorted the authorities to: “Identify the foreign spies who look for Chinese
women to live with and whose occupation is to collect intelligence and compile
maps and GPS data for Japan, Korea and the West while pretending to be
tourists.”
Many
observers noted that, while Beijing authorities have every right to crack down
on the many foreigners living or working without proper documents, Yang’s
comments smacked of racism and unnecessarily stoked anti-foreign sentiment
online.
“It did
sort of feel a little bit like throwing red meat to the angry netizens and
particularly felt so alarming because of the man’s job, which ostensibly is to
encourage dialogue between China and the outside world,” said Jeremy Goldkorn,
who runs a website that tracks the media and the Internet in China.
This
“paranoid fear about spies and stealing our women — it does recall the
vocabulary of racists everywhere,” Goldkorn said.
China’s
nationalism occasionally bubbles over into xenophobia. Scores of foreign
missionaries were slaughtered in the 1900 anti-West Boxer Rebellion. Chinese
youth beat up foreign diplomats during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.
“This
is a country that could be turned xenophobic very quickly, because people in
school are still taught about the Opium Wars and all the unfairness that has
happened in the past,” said McGregor, who called the rising nationalism
“worrisome.”
“China
needs to be connected to the world, and foreigners have had goodwill towards
China. Why would you want to squander that? It’s very short-sighted and could
be quite damaging,” he said.
Some
foreign actions help fuel Chinese suspicions, such as when the U.S. Embassy in
Beijing provided shelter to Chen Guangcheng, the blind activist who fled
abusive house arrest in his rural village.
“Morally
correct or not, the U.S. was actually engaged in an incredibly provocative
act,” said Bill Bishop, a Beijing-based Internet entrepreneur.
Many Chinese
also resent what they consider lenient treatment for visitors when they
misbehave.
Last
week, a Russian cellist with a Beijing symphony was caught on a widely
circulated video hurling vulgarities at a Chinese woman on a train who
complained about his feet on her chair. A security official is seen telling
passengers to let him be because “he’s a musician.”
“Many
Chinese feel like foreigners have been given too much leeway in this kind of
situation,” said Dali Yang, a political scientist at University of Chicago
Center in Beijing.
The
cellist was later fired by the symphony, state media reported Tuesday.
Meanwhile,
CCTV has distanced itself from Yang Rui’s comments, calling them “personal
actions.”
He
issued a statement Monday via state media explaining that the “foreign trash”
in his microblog post were people like the British man in the alleged sexual
assault and the Russian cellist.
“I want
to separate them from the silent majority in the expat communities who obey and
respect our culture and society,” Yang Rui said.
“My
post on May 16th is a wake-up call,” he wrote. “Western or Chinese, no one
should be above the law.”
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