SABOTEURS EXHIBIT APPALLING
CALLOUSNESS IN TIMES OF CRISIS
Andre Vltchek
All objective reports coming
out of China are praising the country for its determined and successful battle
against the new and treacherous disease known as Coronavirus.
The government in Beijing
takes no chances. It is studying the situation, allocating massive resources to
medical research. It is setting up temporary hospitals and medical centers,
informing citizens about the recent developments, while controlling the flow of
people in all affected and high-risk areas.
All this is impressive.
China is fighting for its own people, and it is trying to minimize the impact
on foreign lands. And it is much more effective than what takes place in
Western countries during the same or similar national emergencies.
But how is the Chinese
government rewarded for its life-saving efforts?
The better prepared China
is, the more successfully it gets in fighting the outbreak of the coronavirus
epidemic, the louder the critical voices smearing it in the West become, and
even in its own territory of Hong Kong.
On January 27, 2020, RT
reported shocking occurrences which took place there:
“A small bomb prompted an
evacuation and temporarily disrupted work at a hospital in Hong Kong. Masked protesters
had earlier firebombed a proposed quarantine area for possible coronavirus
victims.
On Sunday, masked
anti-government protesters threw a Molotov cocktail at an empty public
building, where authorities planned to quarantine people who may have contracted
the deadly coronavirus that is currently raging in mainland China.”
These cowardly and selfish
acts will only further discredit the rioters, exposing their destructive and
selfish spirit.
Instead of showing
solidarity and supporting people in dire need of help (as the citizens in
Mainland China are doing with great determination), these hooligans are
reducing future medical facilities to ashes.
Committing such crimes, the
rioters are not “fighting for Hong Kong”; far from it! Needless to say, both people
from Mainland China, as well as Hong Kong residents, are traveling back and
forth, for family visits, cultural exchanges, tourism, and work. Do rioters
want, for instance, a local mother and her child who just returned from Wuhan,
to die on the streets of Kowloon in agony, with no help? Or even if not a
local: would they want an unlucky man or a woman from Mainland China who
earlier contracted the disease, to have no place to go and get help?
If this is what they really want,
then one has to wonder if there is really any Chinese blood left circulating in
their veins, or whether they got converted into compassionless and brutal
subjects of Western colonialist masters.
One wants to shout: “Shame!
This is the Spring Festival time. And Hong Kong is part of one of the oldest,
deepest and most compassionate cultures on Earth! If you do not want to help,
at least do not dare to spoil the efforts of those who do.”
A friend of mine who
practices medicine in Hong Kong wrote to me recently in what appeared to be
despair:
“People in the West
criticize China, no matter what it does. If it barricades a city they say it
has hidden some important information. If it doesn’t do it, they say that
Beijing is acting irresponsibly. They smear China either way.”
He lamented about the
changes which are taking place in his city:
“I have been working the
whole morning in a public hospital. The medical staff is working as usual. But
some doctors and nurses threaten to strike, probably for political gains. Many
of them take sick leaves. I am so ashamed of them. When we had SARS in 2003, we
were not like this. We continued working and even some young doctors died…”
Another Hong Kong-based
doctor wrote to me, bitterly, using WeChat:
“…In contrast, doctors in
China volunteer to work in Wuhan!”
On
30 January 2020, Reuters reported:
“Trade unions in Hong Kong,
including hospital and rail workers, are threatening to go on strike unless the
government closes the border with mainland China to stop the spread of a new
coronavirus that has sent jitters around the world.
While Hong Kong leader
Carrie Lam has ordered the suspension of the high-speed rail service between
the city and mainland China from midnight on Thursday and all cross-border
ferry services, the unions said it was not enough.”
These occurrences may not be
as “spectacular” as the ones in which rioters are burning or beating their
fellow citizens in broad daylight – citizens who simply disagree with them.
But what is taking place is
enormously significant.
It appears that the rioters
have managed to make solidarity totally collapse. Hong Kong has been
infiltrated by savage individualism, or call it Western-style selfishness. The
manual on how to behave and live one’s life is not printed in black and white,
but it can always be guessed: “Let victims collapse in the middle of the
street, and if they are ill, cross to the other side. Shelter yourself. Do not
show compassion. You are all that really matters.”
This is most likely a result
of too many Western flags waving, and of repeating endlessly, “Me-me-me”.
What is certain is that the
People’s Republic of China will eventually defeat the coronavirus. It will
happen sooner than later. In a few months, or perhaps even weeks, the people on
the streets of Beijing and Wuhan will be celebrating yet another great victory.
If it doesn’t come to its senses soon, Hong Kong will be left behind. It will
feel far from being proud of itself, in fact, it will be depressed; depressed
and defeated by its own selfishness.
[First published by ChinaDaily Hong Kong]
Andre Vltchek is a
philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He has covered
wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. He is the author of 20 books
including“China’s Belt and Road Initiative”, and “China and Ecological
Civilization".
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