The View From China

With a tone of injured innocence Xie Feng, commissioner of the Chinese Foreign Ministry in Hong Kong, takes to the pages of the Wall Street Journal to announce China’s readiness to help during the COVID-19 crisis:

China was the first to spot and report the outbreak, identify the pathogen, and share its genome sequence with the World Health Organization and the rest of the world. Yet China has been accused of coverups and delays and put in the dock. At the same time, those who failed to test, report and act in a timely fashion are passing judgment on others. Isn’t it a bit ironic?

As the timeline changes and possible cases are discovered in other countries that predate those found in China, some are anxious to shift the blame instead of reflecting on their own failures in the virus’s early days. Was it because they lacked the techniques, or perhaps a sense of responsibility? Could there have been any undercounting or even coverup? Should a country be labeled as the origin of the virus, held accountable and made to pay for others’ inept responses simply because it was the first to report what it found? If so, what country will be willing to test people and honestly report the findings in the future?

Some are taking things further, trying to make a fortune out of the pandemic. They have demanded reparations from China, a chilling reminder of the Boxer Indemnity foreign powers coerced China into paying more than a century ago. As a Chinese proverb goes, “A gentleman pursues wealth in a righteous way.” Blackmail and plunder are surely not the correct response to a pandemic.

Some others have seen the crisis as an opportunity to cut off trade and decouple economically from China. This has caused bottlenecks in global industrial supply chains and will only set back the recovery of frail economies.

Fighting Covid-19 should be everyone’s first concern. The enemy is the virus. Scapegoating China will neither make up for the time that has been lost, nor save the lives that are at risk. We are teammates in this battle, not rivals. Countries need not compete with or envy each other, still less point the finger at or turn against one another. In fact, quite the opposite is necessary. We need to show sportsmanship and team spirit, give teammates who perform well a pat on the back, and lend a helping hand to those in need. After all, this is a fight nobody can afford to lose, one we must win together.

When disaster struck, people in Eyam and Wuhan made their heroic choices. They are the epitome of responsibility, self-sacrifice and solidarity. Such spirit defies time and space, transcends national, ethnic, religious and ideological boundaries, and inspires the international community to set aside prejudice and differences and unite as one. Not only has it kindled our hope of prevailing over the ongoing pandemic; but it will also light our way to a better future.

If the Chinese government genuinely wanted to be of assistance during the crisis, it should allow an outside task force unrestricted access to China and its records to determine what actually happened from October 2019 through March 2020 in China. Not sending defective tests and PPE to other countries would be nice gestures as well.

I’ll reserve my own views on how China can help other than to ask how can the world trust anything from a China that falsifies its own conduct? If they want to help, they should leave the rest of the world the heck alone.

3 comments… add one
  • CuriousOnlooker Link

    I do not know what the Chinese government is thinking these days.

    As an example; they just got into a big argument with Australia, restricting food imports. They also put restrictions on food imports from Canada over Huawei affair. Their behavior is on course to blow up the trade deal with the US which means no food imports.

    Did they notice Brazil has a major outbreak of Coronavirus and maybe unable to export food for a while? And swine fever is still a huge issue in China.

    China has sufficient grains but tail risk is increasing.

  • CuriousOnlooker Link

    By the way; my preferred style for dealing with the Chinese at the current situation is what the Japanese are doing.

    Figure out what in the supply chain needs to be reshored. Then get it done quietly and quickly.

  • I think that’s right, CuriousOnlooker. Unfortunately, the U. S. doesn’t seem to be able to do anything quietly and quickly.

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