Whether the Canadian connection is true or false hardly matters at this point, except as a way to deflect away from the CCP itself.
It all helps with keeping their citizens storied which is what you do when you are under potential assault.
There is a lot of buzz out there, but the best news is that the collapse cycle is becoming apparent as well. It really will be all over by the end of April.
Chinese official promoting unfounded Canadian theory that coronavirus has roots in U.S. military
Asia correspondent
Beijing
Published March 13, 2020 Updated 10 hours ago
China’s
most outspoken government mouthpiece is promoting an unfounded belief
backed by a Canadian conspiracy theory site that the deadly new
coronavirus spreading around the world has roots in the U.S. military.
“It
might be U.S. army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan. Be transparent!
Make public your data! U.S. owe us an explanation!” Zhao Lijian, a
spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry wrote Thursday to his 286,000
Twitter followers.
Chinese
internet users have spread the idea, which has no connection to
credible scientific conclusions, that COVID-19 is an “American virus,”
and that China has been hurt by foreign influence. The first infection
in China dates back to Nov. 17, the South China Morning Post reported
Friday, and the epicentre of the outbreak is in Wuhan, a major Chinese
transportation hub. Scientists have pointed to bats in China as the
likely source for the virus, and a market selling wild animals in Wuhan
as an important location for its spread to and among humans.
Now,
however, Mr. Zhao has given an official imprimatur to the belief that
the virus may have a U.S. origin, as the Chinese government mounts what
researchers call a counter-offensive to widespread domestic criticism
that a slow response and coverups by China’s leadership allowed the
virus to spread rapidly in Wuhan and the wider Hubei province.
On
Friday, Mr. Zhao revealed a new source for his information: the Centre
for Research on Globalization, or Global Research, a site founded by
Michel Chossudovsky, a professor emeritus at the University of Ottawa,
which has come under investigation by NATO’s Strategic Communications
Centre of Excellence over its content. In 2017, the centre told The
Globe and Mail that it believes Global Research is an important online
actor in promoting the online spread of narratives backed by the Kremlin
and the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Global Research
articles on controversial subjects have sometimes ranked above those
from reputable news organizations in online searches.
“They
increase the Google ranking of the story and create the illusion of
multisource verification,” Donara Barojan, who does digital forensic
research for the centre, told The Globe in 2017. She said at the time
there was no direct proof of direct connections between the site and any
government.
Russia’s
government has used online platforms for disinformation campaigns to
sow confusion and distrust in government, according to reports prepared
for the U.S. government. A 2016 report by the RAND Corporation described
a “firehose of falsehood” from Russia that uses “high numbers of
channels and messages and a shameless willingness to disseminate partial
truths or outright fictions.”
Global
Research calls itself “an independent research and media organization
based in Montreal.” Mr. Chossudovsky in 2017 declined to discuss whether
his site is affiliated with the Kremlin. He has regularly appeared on
Russian-backed media outlets like Sputnik and RT, as well as Iran’s
state-backed PressTV.
But it is a new development for the site’s content to inform China’s own state-backed narratives.
Mr.
Zhao, the Chinese spokesman, linked to an article on Global Research
that itself relies heavily on hearsay reported by Chinese state-backed
media. For example, Global Research includes a quote it says was
published by the People’s Daily on Feb. 23: “Perhaps the U.S. delegates
brought the coronavirus to Wuhan, and some mutation occurred to the
virus, making it more deadly and contagious, and causing a widespread
outbreak this year.” The quote is actually from an article in the
Communist Party-backed Global Times newspaper, and comes from a comment
made by an anonymous user on China’s Twitter-like Weibo service.
Mr.
Zhao is a controversial figure who rose to online prominence in his
previous role as a diplomat in Pakistan when he used Twitter as a
platform to attack those he considered hostile to China. Western social
media – which is virtually all censored in China itself – is “a weapon
to counter these negative narratives,” he told an audience in Islamabad
in 2018. His tweets have promoted Huawei, accused skeptics of Chinese
overseas investment of “dirty lies,” and attacked the U.S. for racism.
“This is a time for Chinese diplomats to tell the true picture,” he told Buzzfeed News in 2019.
His
promotion of the theory that COVID-19 originates from the U.S. comes as
the Chinese government “faces significant challenges,” said Lynette
Ong, a scholar of authoritarian politics at the University of Toronto.
China
fought successfully to keep COVID-19 from being named after Wuhan, the
city at the epicentre of its initial spread. Now it is “trying to
reshape the global narrative about the origins of the virus,” Prof. Ong
said.
Such a counter-attack comes
amid festering anger in China about the government’s response to the
virus and its muzzling of doctors who raised early alarm. One of those
doctors, Li Wenliang, subsequently died from COVID-19, sparking
nation-wide demands for freedom of speech – demands that have
subsequently been scrubbed by China’s powerful censorship regime. China
has itself fought rumours, also not backed by scientific inquiry, that
the virus originated in a virus laboratory in Wuhan.
But the censors have allowed open conversation online about the theory of U.S. involvement in the virus.
”No
matter whether it’s because there’s tangible evidence or because it’s
an attempt to change the way we deal with this public opinion war, I
will support Zhao Lijian’s fight,” one person wrote on Weibo Friday.
“Using Zhao Lijian’s position to openly argue against America mean that
we might have acquired tangible evidence,” wrote another.
But
the preponderance of scientific evidence suggests the virus originated
in Hubei province, said Raina MacIntyre, a doctor and epidemiologist who
leads the biosecurity research program at Australia’s University of New
South Wales. Common sense would suggest the same, she said. She also
dismissed theories that the virus was deliberately released.
“Look at motive,” she said.
“When
you look at the impact this has had on the United States and China –
it’s been catastrophic for both. There’s no gain to be made by either
China or the U.S.”
With reporting by Alexandra Li
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