Anger mounts over Chinese government response at coronavirus epicentre

Chinese social media users have pointed out a number of errors made by authorities during a press conference in Wuhan.

China's Premier Li Keqiang (centre L) speaks with local residents as he visits a supermarket amid a deadly virus outbreak in Wuhan in China's Hubei province.

China's Premier Li Keqiang (centre) speaks with local residents as he visits a supermarket amid a deadly virus outbreak in Wuhan in China's Hubei province. Source: AFP

Chinese officials at the epicentre of a coronavirus crisis are coming under fire for incompetence and being ridiculed for not properly wearing protective masks as anger mounts over the handling of a deadly virus.

Many Chinese citizens were incensed by what they perceived as a series of errors at a televised press conference on Sunday, by three local officials at the heart of the new outbreak.

Governor of the central Hubei province Wang Xiaodong held the press conference without wearing a mask - in violation of the provincial capital Wuhan's own rules mandating masks in public spaces.
Empty roads in Wuhan.
Empty roads in Wuhan. Source: Getty Images AsiaPac
Meanwhile, the mayor of Wuhan was wearing his mask incorrectly by having it on inside out, pointed out Chinese users on Weibo, .

"If the mayor doesn't even know how to wear a mask, how will everyday people know?" criticised one user.

"Incompetent and irresponsible politicians," wrote another in a scathing comment about the press briefing.

The comments are a rare instance of public anger outpacing the army of online censors in China, where criticism of government figures is usually scrubbed.

By Monday afternoon, a hashtag on the press briefing had more than 680 million views on Weibo.
Online users also zeroed in on Wang's repeated fumble of Hubei's annual mask production, giving three revisions to his answer from 10.8 billion to 1.8 billion, to 1.08 million.

"As the governor of Hubei province, how can you not know how many masks Hubei province produces?" asked one incredulous user.

Hubei province is at the heart of China's new virus outbreak, which has killed at least 80 people and infected more than 2,700 people across the country and has spread overseas,
"We also feel very distressed and very guilty, and we also very much blame ourselves," said Wang at Sunday's press briefing.

In Hubei, Chinese authorities have stopped public transport in at least 18 cities in a bid to contain the deadly virus, while putting the capital - a city of 11 million inhabitants - .

Closing transport out of Wuhan was a "very difficult decision," added Zhou Xianwang, Wuhan's mayor, in an interview with state broadcaster CCTV on Monday.
"We may have blocked the disease, but we will all go down in history with a bad name," he admitted. 

The mayor of Wuhan has already faced scrutiny for allowing a massive Lunar New Year banquet - involving 40,000 families - to take place despite the spread of the virus.


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3 min read
Published 27 January 2020 10:46pm
Source: AFP, SBS

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