China blasts US President Donald Trump for calling coronavirus ‘the Chinese Virus’

Donald Trump doubled down Tuesday after China has lashed out at Washington for him calling the novel coronavirus ‘the Chinese Virus’.

President Trump tweeted Monday: ‘The United States will be powerfully supporting those industries, like Airlines and others, that are particularly affected by the Chinese Virus. We will be stronger than ever before!’

Early Tuesday Beijing demanded ‘the U.S. side correct the mistake immediately and halt its groundless accusations’.

But Trump then doubled down tweeting Tuesday morning about New York’s governor Andrew Cuomo – who has demanded the military are activated to build hospitals – that:: ‘Cuomo wants “all states to be treated the same.” 

‘But all states aren’t the same. Some are being hit hard by the Chinese Virus, some are being hit practically not at all.’

First hit: Beijing has accused ‘certain American politicians’ of promoting stigmatisation by connecting the novel coronavirus with China after President Trump published the post on Twitter

Doubledown:

Doubledown: 

China has expressed its 'strong indignation and resolute opposition' after US President Donald Trump referred to the coronavirus as 'the Chinese virus' in a tweet yesterday. President Trump is pictured speaking during a press briefing with the coronavirus task force on March 16

China has expressed its ‘strong indignation and resolute opposition’ after US President Donald Trump referred to the coronavirus as ‘the Chinese virus’ in a tweet yesterday. President Trump is pictured speaking during a press briefing with the coronavirus task force on March 16

'The United States should mind its own business first, and then make constructive contributions to the international counter-epidemic collaboration and the maintenance of the global public health safety,' said Geng Shuang (pictured) from China's Foreign Ministry

‘The United States should mind its own business first, and then make constructive contributions to the international counter-epidemic collaboration and the maintenance of the global public health safety,’ said Geng Shuang (pictured) from China’s Foreign Ministry

Geng Shuang, a spokesperson from China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, accused ‘certain American politicians’ of promoting stigmatisation by connecting the novel coronavirus with China.

He did not name President Trump specifically, but was referring to President Trump’s tweet, reported Chinese state news agency Xinhua. 

‘We express strong indignation and resolute opposition to this,’ Mr Geng said at a daily news briefing.

The spokesperson stressed that the coronavirus outbreak had occurred in multiple places around the world and the urgent task was for the international community to join forces to curb the pandemic.

‘The United States should mind its own business first, and then make constructive contributions to the international counter-epidemic collaboration and the maintenance of the global public health safety,’ Mr Geng continued.

Coronavirus fears have gripped the United States with multiple cities going into lock down. Young people wear protective masks while walking through Times Square in NYC on March 5

Coronavirus fears have gripped the United States with multiple cities going into lock down. Young people wear protective masks while walking through Times Square in NYC on March 5

More than 4,660 people have been infected and at least 86 have died of the virus in the US

More than 4,660 people have been infected and at least 86 have died of the virus in the US

Anti-US sentiment is also growing in China as people on the country’s Twitter-like Weibo has shown an outpouring of anger towards President Trump.

One person said: ‘Trump is the virus of the world’.

Another typical comment accused: ‘American virus!’

A petition urging President Trump to apologise over his comment has appeared on the White House’s website.

The post read: ‘President Trump owes all Chinese apologies for naming COVID19 “the Chinese Virus” in his latest twitter, especially under the circumstances where the origin of COVID-19 is not scientifically definite yet. Not only is his twitter defiance against science, but also cause hostages among Chinese and the other races.’

The request would need 100,000 signatures to secure a response from the White House. As of writing, 25,716 people have signed.

The news comes as China tries to deflect blame for the contagion and reframe itself as a country that took decisive steps to buy the world time by placing huge swathes of its population under quarantine.

The world should follow China's principles of early detection, early quarantine and early treatment to curb the escalating coronavirus pandemic, state-run newspaper China Daily said

The world should follow China’s principles of early detection, early quarantine and early treatment to curb the escalating coronavirus pandemic, state-run newspaper China Daily said

China built a 1,000-bed coronavirus hospital in 10 days in Wuhan to curb the epidemic. The picture shows Huoshenshan Hospital nearly complete on the outskirts of Wuhan on February 3

China built a 1,000-bed coronavirus hospital in 10 days in Wuhan to curb the epidemic. The picture shows Huoshenshan Hospital nearly complete on the outskirts of Wuhan on February 3

State-run newspaper China Daily today urged the rest of the world to learn from China and follow the principles of early detection, early quarantine and early treatment to halt the global spread of the coronavirus.

China reported only one new domestic infection today compared to a daily toll of 15,152 five weeks ago. 

It also comes after China and the United States blamed each other as the alleged origin of the killer infection.

A Beijing spokesperson last week claimed that the coronavirus might have been brought to Wuhan by the US military while US politicians called it the ‘Wuhan virus’ or ‘Chinese coronavirus’.

With cases falling in China and soaring abroad, Beijing is now rejecting the widely held assessment that the city of Wuhan is the birthplace of the outbreak.

Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian went a step further on Thursday, saying on Twitter that ‘it might be US army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan’ – without providing any evidence.

He doubled down on his claim on Friday by posting a link to an article from a website known for publishing conspiracy theories about the 9/11 attacks.

China's Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian (pictured) accused the US military of bringing the coronavirus to Wuhan

While US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (pictured) referred to it as the 'Wuhan virus'

China and the US have blamed each other as the alleged origin of the virus. China’s Foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian (left) accused the US military of bringing the coronavirus to Wuhan while US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (right) referred to it as the ‘Wuhan virus’

Dali Yang, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, said he believed Zhao was ‘tweeting in his official capacity’.

China’s intention in promoting the conspiracy theory is ‘to divert from domestic discontent’ over the handling of the outbreak, which has killed more than 3,200 people in the country.

Asked if Mr Zhao was representing the government’s view, fellow foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters on Friday that ‘the international community, including (people) in the United States, have different views on the source of the virus’.

‘China from the beginning thinks this is a scientific issue, and that we need to listen to scientific and professional advice,’ Geng said.

The United States, meanwhile, has angered China by using language directly linking the virus to the country.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo referred to it as the ‘Wuhan virus’, prompting Beijing to reject the term as ‘despicable’ and ‘disrespecting science’.

While Kevin McCarthy, a US congressman, called the virus the ‘Chinese coronavirus’ on Twitter.

In a tweet on Monday, he wrote: ‘Everything you need to know about the Chinese coronavirus can be found on one, regularly-updated website.’ He was sharing the link to the website of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

China admitted the coronavirus originated in Wuhan in January 

A woman walks in front of the closed Huanan wholesale seafood market on January 12

A woman walks in front of the closed Huanan wholesale seafood market on January 12

The push to question the origin of the disease contradicts China’s own initial assessment about the source of the virus, which has now killed more than 7,000 people worldwide.

Gao Fu, head of China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said in January ‘we now know the source of the virus is wild animals sold at the seafood market’ in Wuhan.

Chinese authorities themselves saw Wuhan and the rest of Hubei province as a threat as they placed the region of 56 million people under strict quarantine to contain the epidemic.

But Beijing began sowing doubts in late February, when Zhong Nanshan, a respected expert affiliated with the National Health Commission, told reporters ‘the epidemic first appeared in China, but didn’t necessarily originate in China’.

Scientists, however, have long suspected that the virus jumped from an animal at the Wuhan market to a human before spreading globally.

The World Health Organization has said that while the exact path the virus took between its animal source and humans is still unclear, COVID-19 was ‘unknown before the outbreak began in Wuhan, China, in December 2019’.

Christl Donnelly, a professor of statistical epidemiology at Imperial College London, said genetic analysis of coronavirus samples collected from around the world showed a common ancestor in China.

‘This is not in any way blaming a particular country,’ she told AFP.