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Chinese racism

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athena
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Chinese are very racist and it’s endorsed by theirgovernment

https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/02/18/covid-blackface-tv-chinas-racism-problem-runs-deep#

From Covid to Blackface on TV, China’s Racism Problem Runs Deep

That's what we saw last week on the eve of the Lunar New Year, when the Chinese state broadcaster CCTV televised its annual live variety show, which draws hundreds of millions of viewers, featuring dancers in blackface.

For those who think the official line from Beijing is bad, check out the Chinese internet, where the rampant racism against Black people is often too appalling to repeat.

This performative use of blackface belies a rampant racism problem in the country, which comes on the heels of

growing discrimination against Black people and Africans by the Chinese government, which appears to be compounded by the pandemic.

Last April, authorities in the southern city of Guangzhou, which has China’s largest African community, launched a campaign to forcibly test Africans in the city for the coronavirus, and ordered them to self-isolate or quarantine in designated hotels. Landlords evicted African residents, forcing many to sleep on the street, in hotels or in shops. Some restaurants refused to serve Black customers.

Scenes of Africans sleeping on the street with their belongings were shared widely on social media, which sparked outrage among African communities around the world and prompted rare public rebuke from some African governments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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ASIANS 4 BLACK LIVES MATTER 黑人的命也是命 avatar
(@naval)
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@athena thank you for your honesty

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athena
Posts: 931
Topic starter
(@athena)
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Omg, the depravity. Chinese pay to see racist videos. No need to hide behind any subtlety here. Video in the article. African children taught to say self degrading things in mandarin on video for Chinese netcitizens to get a good laugh.

 

 

https://www.breitbart.com/africa/2022/06/17/chinese-man-in-malawi-sold-videos-of-black-children-tricked-into-saying-i-have-a-low-iq-in-mandarin/

The Communist Party of China dismissed a bombshell BBC report revealing a lucrative industry in which Chinese citizens sell demeaning videos of African children online in a statement on Thursday, calling the most incendiary of these videos an “isolated case by a fool.”

In its documentary Racism for Sale, BBC journalist Runako Celina traced the origins of a viral video on China’s government-controlled Weibo social media site that showed a group of African children shouting in Mandarin, “I am a black monster and I have a low IQ.” The children appear clearly unaware of what they are saying.

In another video featured by the BBC, African children sing a song with the lyrics, “yellow skin and dark eyes are the most beautiful color.”

The video went viral in 2020 on a Weibo page called “Jokes About Black People Club.” While the video itself is two years old, this week’s BBC report revealed the first documented proof, including interviews with the exploited children, of where and when the video was filmed: that year in the outskirts of Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi. Celina found a man named Lu Ke, who made the children refer to him as “Susu,” or “uncle,” who appeared responsible for the video, though he denied it.

Personalized videos of African children sending happy birthday greetings, congratulating newlyweds, or engaging in sexualized dancing have become a profitable industry for Chinese people in poorer parts of the continent, according to the BBC, adding to growing concerns that China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a global infrastructure program in which China targets economically vulnerable states with predatory loans, has also unleashed a wave of racist abuse by Chinese citizens around the world.

The “black monster” video scandal follows years of reports of outrageous racist behavior by Chinese businessmen in Africa as part of the BRI. Among the most high-profile scandals was the revelation of a video of a Chinese businessman calling Kenyans, including President Uhuru Kenyatta, “monkey people” in 2018; the gang-beating of a Kenyan engineer working on a BRI by Chinese laborers; and the use of “apartheid” facilities at work stations for BRI projects throughout Africa. China regularly refers to the steady stream of reports of racism against black people both within and outside China as “isolated incidents.”

The BBC report found that locals in Malawi believed Lu Ke to be a charity worker in town to teach children Mandarin and Chinese culture. Chinese video producers like Lu, according to the children’s parents, take the children out of school under the pretext of teaching them Mandarin but do not teach them anything, leaving them essentially without an education.

Confronted by the BBC, Lu Ke initially denied making the “black monster” video and claimed that he was making Weibo videos of African children for the “public good.” He then claimed that accusations that he made the video were a case of “mistaken identity” before accusing Malawians generally of being racist against Chinese people.

In response to the report, the Chinese Embassy in Malawi initially dismissed the video as old news.

We strongly condemn racism in any form, by anyone or happening anywhere. We also noted that the video was shot in 2020,” the embassy stated, according to the local outlet Malawi24.

The statement prompted outrage in Malawi as it did not include an apology or indication of further action to prevent such incidents in the future. Malawian Foreign Minister Nancy Tembo said her country was “disgusted, disrespected, and deeply pained” by the report.

On Thursday, the embassy issued another statement acknowledging the outrage, but once again not apologizing or promising any significant action. On the contrary, the statement distanced Lu from the Chinese government.

“The Chinese community in Malawi has voiced their condemnation to racism in strong words,” the statement read in part, according to Voice of America. “the isolated case by a fool individual does not change the whole picture.”

Chinese diplomat Wu Peng, who runs the Foreign Ministry’s African affairs department, issued a statement indirectly addressing the incident by claiming that China and Malawi would “continue to crack down on such racial discrimination videos in the future,” without elaborating. Wu was visiting Malawi at the time.

Malawian police vowed to launch an investigation into any potentially criminal behavior involving the videos, including child abuse. Malawi24 found in an online poll that nationals enthusiastically want Lu Ke prosecuted for child exploitation and hate crimes. The poll also found that Malawians were not interested in deporting Lu back to China without facing justice in their country. Deportation is a common method of handling instances of Chinese racism in Africa; for example, Liu Jiaqi, the man caught on video calling all Kenyans “monkey people,” was simply deported home and it is not clear if he faced any consequences for his insults.

Reports have not clarified Lu Ke’s whereabouts at press time.

Follow Frances Martel on 

2">Facebook and https://twitter.com/francesmartel&source=gmail&ust=1655402440625000&usg=AOvVaw0k_Fs0TCSr6nwmzFpjupG 1">Twitter.

 

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athena
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Chinese bans certain ethnic groups from renting their Property on AIRBNB. this behavior is enforced by government police. Airbnb so woke how come they don’t do anything.

https://www.wired.co.uk/article/airbnb-china-uyghur-muslim

Want to book a comfortable two-bedroom apartment in the central city of Chongqing? That’s fine, unless you are Uyghur, a mostly Muslim ethnic minority from China’s far Western region of Xinjiang who are currently the victims of a campaign of https://www.vox.com/2018/8/15/17684226/uighur-china-camps-united-nations" }">mass detentions.

As the listing https://fi.airbnb.com/rooms/15036383?guests=1&adults= 1" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener" data-offer-url="https://web.archive.org/web/20190429131406/ https://fi.airbnb.com/rooms/15036383?guests=1&adults= 1" data-event-click="{"element":"ExternalLink","outgoingURL":" https://web.archive.org/web/20190429131406/https://fi.airbnb.com/rooms/15036383?guests=1&adults=1" }">reads: “We do not have the permission of the police station” to host Uyghurs, so “please do not book”. Another ad for a flashy Chengdu condo complete with a flat screen TV and a painting of a bulldog https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/18816786?guests=1&adults= 1" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener" data-offer-url="https://web.archive.org/web/20190429131322/ https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/18816786?guests=1&adults= 1" data-event-click="{"element":"ExternalLink","outgoingURL":" https://web.archive.org/web/20190429131322/https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/18816786?guests=1&adults=1" }">explains in English that Tibetan and Uyghur guests are not allowed “Due to local regulation [sic]”

We found 35 separate Airbnb listings in China with similar clauses explicitly barring certain ethnic minorities, mostly Uyghurs but in many cases Tibetans, another troublesome minority with separatist leanings in Beijing’s eyes. After WIRED contacted Airbnb’s press team for this story, 15 of the 35 were suddenly taken down.

 

Other minorities are included as well: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/19122497?guests=1&adults=1" }">one since-deleted listing banned any member of the mostly Muslim Hui people, a community that’s https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-applies-xinjiangs-policing-lessons-to-other-muslim-areas-11545566403" }">reportedlyfacing increasing repression in China amid rising Islamophobia, https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/33671990?guests=1&adults= 1" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener" data-offer-url="https://web.archive.org/web/20190501102351/ https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/33671990?guests=1&adults= 1" data-event-click="{"element":"ExternalLink","outgoingURL":" https://web.archive.org/web/20190501102351/https://es.airbnb.com/rooms/33671990?guests=1&adults=1" }">while another banned Kazakhs, another mostly Muslim ethnic minority which has been https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jan/09/china-to-let-thousands-of-ethnic-kazakhs-leave-xinjiang" }">caught up in China’s Xinjiang crackdown.

“In general the process in China is that any hotel that hosts Uyghurs would get an obligatory police visit,” says Maya Wang, senior China researcher for Human Rights Watch. “These facilities generally ban any Uyghurs or any Xinjiang residents, which is of course highly discriminatory, to prevent themselves getting in trouble with the authorities.”

In recent years, Airbnb has aggressively expanded into China, a huge, lucrative market where it is one of the few Western tech giants whose website is not blocked by the Chinese government. In 2017 Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky even https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-30/airbnb-founders-go-it-alone-in-china-after-refusing-merger-offer" }">fought off a merger attempt with a local competitor, avoiding the fate of Uber, which ended operations in exchange for a stake in Chinese rival Didi Chuxing.

Airbnb removed around half the listings we identified. A spokesperson for the company said it took reports of discrimination seriously and evaluated them on a “case-by-case basis”.

The take-downs come at a time when Airbnb has reversed a decision to remove listings for properties location in Israeli settlements in the West Bank. In November 2018 it had removed around 200 rental properties which it said were “at the core of the dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.” But at the start of April it settled four lawsuits and allowed properties in the area to be relisted.

Airbnb’s China subsidiary is called https://qz.com/939253/chinas-consumers-hate-airbnbs-new-chinese-name-so-much-that-they-are-brainstorming-a-new-one/" }">“Aibiying”, which the firm sent veteran entrepreneur Tao Peng to run in 2018. “China is a critical priority for Airbnb,” Peng https://www.phocuswire.com/airbnb-china-interview-tao-peng" }">said in March. To expand, Airbnb is closer than ever before to China’s https://consent.yahoo.com/collectConsent?sessionId=3_cc-session_50eda2df-9fdd-4fc1-a193-355a54e0e1bf&lang=&inline=false" }">notoriously fickle regulators. Airbnb http://time.com/5221666/airbnb-china-share-data-chinese-government/" }">made headlines in March last year when it announced it would comply with China’s long-running guest registration system, which https://www.scmp.com/tech/article/2139526/airbnb-complies-china-law-hand-over-guest-details-listings-double" }">requireshosts to register foreign guests with police when they check in.

 

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athena
Posts: 931
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So the Chinese are good at terrorizing other ethnics on the internet. Now they deride Koreans.

https://www.change.org/p/un-cerd-stop-chinese-netizens-racist-cyber-terror-attacks-regarding-korean-culture?original_footer_petition_id=23959929&algorithm=promoted&source_location=petition_footer&grid_position=3&pt=AVBldGl0aW9uALmqogEAAAAAYDiPKBQ0a8YxZDEzNjE5OA%3D%3D

Recently, Chinese netizens terrorized more than 10,000 comments on a photo of a famous Korean celebrity Kim So Hyun wearing hanbok for Seollal(Lunar New Year).

 

They deny the traditional culture of Koreans and systematically leave disparaging curses with expressions such as "Koreans are photographed in traditional Chinese clothing" and "Thank you for loving traditional Chinese clothes".

 

Also, regarding the posts by Korean NGO VANK promoting hanbok, their indiscriminate abusive and demeaning language, contempt and ridicule of Korean history and culture are continuing and the intensity is getting worse as follows: "dick head(狗头)", "My grandfather is older than your country's 'everlasting' history(我家中祖父的年龄尚且大于贵国“悠久”的历史)", "Does Korea have history?(韩国有历史吗?)"

 

As such, it is presumed that the background of this reckless cyber comment terrorism of Chinese netizens include members of the Chinese Wumao Dang(Internet commentators, more known as "50 Cent Party" or "50 Cent Army") and Xiao Fenhong that have been educated by Zhonghua(Chinese) nationalism.

 

The 50 Cent Party is a 'part-timer corps' that supports the Chinese Communist Party on the Internet and comments on anti-government public opinion. Recently, the Chinese government declared it would turn it into a military organization. Xiao Fenhong is a generation born after the 1990s, who received a lifelong "Zhonghua(Chinese) nationalism" education from the Chinese Communist Party, and is showing off the power of China, which has risen to the ranks of the G2, online.

 

The 50 Cent Party is committed to cyber-terrorism, denying the cultures of other ethnic groups and using racist expressions and hate expressions by absorbing the generation of Xiao Fenhong who had recently been educated with Zhonghua(Chinese) nationalism.

 

The contents of their cyber terrorism is mainly hate speech that violates the right to express the cultural identity of other peoples, and it corresponds to racial discrimination.

 

International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) defines "racial discrimination" as: any distinction, exclusion, restriction or preference based on race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin which has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life.

 

Article 4 of the Convention obligates the States Parties to take punitive legislative measures on ideas based on racial superiority or hatred, incitement to racial discrimination, as well as all acts of violence or incitement to such acts. People's Republic of China is also the accession state of the Convention.

 

The acts of enjoying and expressing Korean culture by Koreans are cultural rights protected by Article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The 50 Cent Party's acts of criticizing, despising, and mocking Koreans' acts of enjoying and expressing Korean culture are acts of racial discrimination that violates the exercise of cultural rights.

 

In particular, despite the obligation to impose sanctions against racial discrimination, the Chinese government promotes and organizes such discrimination, which is a violation of international law committed by the state.

 

 

We are not denying that Korean culture was influenced by neighboring countries.

 

We have been influenced by the cultures of neighboring countries, and in the process, we just want to shape our culture and freely enjoy and express our culture as an expression of identity.

 

We are not trying to take away Chinese culture.

 

We are satisfied enough with our culture and respect the culture of our neighboring countries.

 

We request the international community of the following:

 

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination should recommend China not to violate the rights to enjoy the identity and culture of other peoples.

 

The Chinese government should ban racial discrimination and hate speech by its nationals who violate other peoples' right to enjoy their own culture.

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