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  • - [Narrator] On China's version of Twitter called Weibo,

  • news of George Floyd's killing,

  • and the protests were trending with these hashtags.

  • (piano playing)

  • Well, on the Chinese version of TikTok called Douyin,

  • videos like this were being widely shared.

  • They were created by two inescapable accounts

  • on both platforms.

  • The Chinese state media publication,

  • Peoples' Daily and television network, CCTV.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] The actual violence that has sparked up

  • both the protest movement, but also the aftermath.

  • The looting, the rioting,

  • has been a really catching the attention

  • of Chinese state media in part to show that,

  • the protests in the United States

  • are not particularly peaceful.

  • - [Narrator] At a time when global backlash builds against

  • China over Coronavirus, and Beijing's relationship

  • with the US grows increasingly strained.

  • - China's coverup of the Wuhan virus allowed the disease

  • to spread all over the world.

  • - [Narrator] Events like the protests and the pandemic

  • have given the Chinese propaganda machine a lot

  • to work with.

  • Here's a look at the narrative

  • that's being crafted and why rallying citizens at home

  • is critical to Beijing's power.

  • - [Man] No justice.

  • - [Crowd] No peace.

  • - [Narrator] Though the demonstrations in the US

  • have been largely peaceful, inside China,

  • the protests have mainly been portrayed like this.

  • (solemn music)

  • - [Maria Repnikova] Some of it is propaganda,

  • but some of it is also just reporting the actual news,

  • shows to the Chinese public that the US is far from perfect.

  • - [Narrator] Maria Repnikova is a Political Scientist

  • who studies Chinese propaganda.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] It's just a really kind of a huge amount

  • of information that's coming from the US media scape

  • on the protest movement into the

  • Chinese domestic media sphere.

  • So it's been really impressive to watch.

  • - [Narrator] Repnikova says state media often choose

  • the most violent scenes and use dramatic music.

  • (dramatic music).

  • President Trump has also been a gold mine.

  • - And I will deploy the United States military.

  • I hope that you also use our national guard.

  • Call me, we'll be ready for them so fast.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] The US president has condemned them,

  • and kind of shown disdain for those protesters.

  • He's even threatened to use the military force

  • in response to those movements.

  • - [Lady] (foreign language).

  • - [Maria Repnikova] That story really tarnishes

  • the image of the United States as a peaceful

  • or a legitimate democracy.

  • - China ruthlessly imposes Communism.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] And especially the US

  • as a critic of human rights violations in China.

  • - [Narrator] Repnikova says the US protests

  • have also come at an opportune time for Beijing.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] It helps to kind of take the attention

  • span away from what went wrong in China

  • to what's happening around the world,

  • especially in America.

  • - [Narrator] In the early stages of the pandemic,

  • as hospitals became overwhelmed and there was

  • little information about the new virus,

  • Beijing turn to a trusted strategy.

  • Suppress any critical news coverage.

  • - [Fu King-Wa] He called (mumbles) officers knew

  • in advance about all the risks,

  • and the impacted nature of the virus.

  • So the question about why early warning like

  • (mumbling) a center.

  • - [Narrator] Fu King-Wa has been tracking censored posts

  • on Weibo since 2011.

  • He says Chinese censors covered up negative reports

  • from citizen journalists to whistleblower doctors.

  • Meanwhile, state media content about China's prompt

  • response, like two hospitals that were built

  • in under two weeks, or Premier Li Keqiang's visit to Wuhan

  • circulated widely on Weibo or Douyin.

  • Fu's research found that around two out

  • of 1000 posts related to the outbreak

  • on Weibo were censored.

  • - [Fu King-Wa] The state media controls large amounts of

  • (mumbles).

  • So it basically occupies the majority of numbers.

  • - [Narrator] Censorship spiked during key events like

  • the death of a whistleblower doctor,

  • or when the Chinese CDC published a paper confirming human

  • to human transmission, which sparked an online debate

  • about whether the government knew earlier.

  • Another common tactic state media have used

  • is gathering foreign voices to give Beijing credibility.

  • - [Man] I welcome it all.

  • They did everything right.

  • - [Maria Repnikova] Interviews with various individuals

  • who have really good reputation with Western media,

  • Presidents of different countries,

  • and the heads of international organizations.

  • All of them kind of suggesting

  • that the US hasn't done that well,

  • but China has been more responsible.

  • - [Lady] (foreign language).

  • - [Narrator] While gauging real sentiment in China's

  • state controlled online environment is difficult,

  • some of the comments under these posts show

  • Beijing's narrative appears to be convincing.

  • And it's appearances that matters says Repnikova because

  • this type of nationalism is the point of propaganda.

  • And one way for China to secure its legitimacy at home,

  • as tensions outside the mainland increase.

  • - [Man] (foreign language)

  • - [Crowd] (claps) (cheers).

- [Narrator] On China's version of Twitter called Weibo,

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中国はどのようにしてパンデミックと抗議をプロパガンダの機会に変えたのか|WSJ (How China Turned the Pandemic and Protests Into Propaganda Opportunities | WSJ)

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    Seraya に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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