Published: 12:29, July 6, 2020 | Updated: 23:05, June 5, 2023
WHO warns against politicizing COVID-19
By Chen Weihua in Brussels

Volley of racially charged language by Trump draws wide condemnation

Professor Albert Bosch from the faculty of biology at the University of Barcelona, Spain, at his office on June 29. Bosch confirmed to Xinhua News Agency on June 29 that a study he coordinated detected the novel coronavirus in wastewater samples collected in Barcelona on March 12, 2019. (ISMAEL PERACAULA / XINHUA)

The World Health Organization on June 29 warned against the stigmatization and politicization of COVID-19, a week after US President Donald Trump repeatedly used controversial terms in his speeches.

In his tweets and speeches in the past weeks, Trump has used “China plague”, “kung flu” and “China virus” to describe COVID-19.

“By the way, it’s a disease, without question, (which) has more names than any disease in history,” Trump said in a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “I can name ‘kung flu’. I can name 19 different versions of them.”

The racial stigmatization has drawn wide condemnation in the United States.

Former US president Barack Obama has slammed Trump for trying to promote anti-Asian sentiment by using racist language to refer to the coronavirus during campaign rallies.

“I don’t want a country in which the president of the United States is actively trying to promote anti-Asian sentiment, and thinks it’s funny. I don’t want that. That still shocks and pisses me off,” Obama reportedly said at a recent invitation-only fundraiser for presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Program, said at a virtual news conference on June 29: “We encourage all people at all levels and in all countries to use language that is appropriate, respectful and that is not associated with any connotations that are negative.

“It is unfortunate if our global discourse is reduced to base language. That never helps.” Ryan also noted that when people choose national unity against a common enemy, they sometimes do not get to choose who leads them in that fight.

“We cannot continue to allow the fight against this virus to become and to be sustained as an ideological fight. You can’t beat a virus with ideologies. Simply cannot,” he said.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at the news conference that all over the world people have seen heartwarming acts of resilience, inventiveness, solidarity and kindness in the battle against COVID-19.

“But we have also seen concerning signs of stigma, misinformation and the politicization of the pandemic,” he said.

Tedros emphasized that from the start, the WHO has talked about “quarantine COVID politics”. He said: “We have to fight this virus in unison”, adding that it will otherwise exploit differences.

National unity and global solidarity, Tedros said, are essential to implementing a comprehensive strategy to suppress transmission, save lives and minimize the social and economic impact of the virus.

June 30 marked six months since the WHO received the first reports of a cluster of cases of pneumonia of unknown cause in China. So far, the WHO has recorded more than 10 million cases and 500,000 deaths.

Wang Qingyun in Beijing and Xinhua contributed to this story.

chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn