

Some see India's intense coronavirus battle as an opportunity for China to ease tensions with its neighbor. DeFodi Images via Getty Images The Chinese Communist Party’s law enforcement body pulled a posting mocking India’s. Nationalist sentiment has been running high in both countries as the two world powers spar over a 2,100 mile-long disputed border in the Himalayan region. The Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission mocked India's funeral pyres. They should instead "hold high the banner of humanitarianism at this time, show sympathy for India, and firmly place Chinese society on a moral high ground," he said. Hu Xijin, the editor-in-chief of the Communist Party-backed Global Times also blasted the move, saying: "I don't think it's proper for social media accounts of certain Chinese official institutions or other influential forces to mock India at present." "China is willing to enhance cooperation with India on fighting COVID-19 and provide support and assistance to India," Xi was quoted as saying in that by state television.Both posts were deleted after many Chinese Weibo users expressed anger at the insensitivity expressed. The post showed a rocket being launched by the Chinese government to space and. Weibo account having a link with the Chinese Communist Party posted on social media to contrast the stark realities of China and India. Chinese President Xi Jinping then wrote a message to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday that expressed sympathy and promised to help India battle the outbreak. China uses juxtaposition to mock India’s COVID situation: Ironical much by Arijita Sinha Roy First, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin pledged last week that China would provide medical supplies, including oxygen concentrators, to India. The Weibo messages from the two bodies of the CCP conflict with other public statements from Chinese officials. China is facing backlash after a social media account linked to the ruling Communist Party shared a post mocking India’s struggles to contain COVID-19. The post, which has since been deleted, outraged many Chinese citizens as much as it appalled us. The headline read: How China lights fires vs how India lights fires. In January, China revealed four of its soldiers were killed during the violent confrontation. by Olafimihan Oshin - 05/03/21 11:21 AM ET. It mocked the devastating situation in India with side-by-side pictures of a Chinese rocket being launched into space and Indians cremating their dead. The South China Morning Post wrote that the Weibo posts were made as attempts "to pander to nationalist sentiment." Relations between the two countries have been tense since June of last year when a clash broke out on the Himalayan border between members of China's People's Liberation Army and Indian troops in the Galwan Valley.

Both posts have since been been deleted following widespread criticisms of insensitivity. The Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission has 15 million followers on Weibo, while the Ministry of Public Security has 31 million followers. The posts from the two agencies appeared on Weibo, which is often referred to as the Chinese version of Twitter.
China mocks india full#
Accusing India of committing 7 sins, Chinas official news agency, Xinhua, posted this 3-minute video, full of rhetoric and distorted facts, which portrayed Indians in a very poor taste.

Philippines Tells China to Get Ships 'the F*** Out' of Disputed Waters Chinese media resorted to a new low when it released a racist video to target India on the 2-month-long Doklam standoff.Throughout the country, crematoriums have reached maximum capacity and mass funeral pyres have been erected to burn those who have died from complications from the virus. India is currently going through an unprecedented crisis involving COVID-19, with new cases recently passing 400,000 in one day. On Friday, that department juxtaposed an emergency hospital in Wuhan named Huoshenshan (which means fire god mountain) with a photo of a mass cremation ground in India.

The images and mocking words from the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission came a day after the country's Ministry of Public Security shared a similar post. On Saturday, the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission posted a picture on social media of China's recent space launch with the caption, "China lighting a fire." Next to that image was a photo of Indian funeral pyres with the caption, "India lighting a fire." Punit Paranjpe / AFP/Getty A crematorium staff member lights a pyre of a COVID-19 coronavirus victim in India on April 23.
