Chinese social media posts belittle the stabbing murder of a boy in Fuka with an unfounded comment “There are many incidents targeting Chinese people in Japan as well.”
[Beijing = Mitsuka Seihei] Following the incident in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China, where a Japanese boy (10) attending a Japanese school was stabbed to death by a man, there have been a series of posts on Chinese social networking sites stating that “Similar attacks targeting Chinese people are occurring in Japan as well.” The majority of these incidents stemmed from disputes with acquaintances, and these baseless posts appear to be an attempt to belittle the Shenzhen incident. On the Chinese microblogging website Weibo, posts mourning the victimized children have been met with a growing number of posts arguing, “If that’s the case, how do you feel about the Chinese people who were killed in Japan?” The report cites several “specific examples,” including the murder of a Chinese self-employed man in Osaka City in October 2022, and the murder of a Chinese high school boy whose body was found murdered in Lake Hamana, Shizuoka Prefecture, in February of this year. In July of this year, a Chinese tourist was stabbed in the arm with a knife in Osaka and money was demanded, but neither incident was reported as targeting Chinese people. Apart from robbery, the other cases involve people believed to have been killed by acquaintances due to disputes over money or friendships. At least there have been no cases of children being suddenly stabbed to death by adults they do not know. There are also people on Chinese social media who are verifying that the information that there are many attacks targeting Chinese people in Japan is a “rumor,” but the posts have not stopped at this time. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs has maintained that “similar incidents could occur in any country,” and has not released any information that could lead to the truth behind the incident, such as a motive. On Chinese social media, discriminatory posts against Japanese people, as well as rumours and absurd claims that Japanese schools are “spy schools” or “concessions,” have been allowed to spread unchecked. Some in China believe that such comments on social media have fueled anti-Japanese sentiment and influenced the incident. 2024/9/22 17:51 ※Related thread [Yomiuri Shimbun] Chinese official media almost silent on murder of boy in Shenzhen… SNS posts deleted one after another [9/21] [Masked Unida★] [money1] The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs covers up the fact that it was a hate crime targeting Japanese people. [9/22] [Masked Unida★].
>>1 >There are many attacks on Chinese people in Japan Are there many cases of Chinese people being run over or slashed by other Chinese people in Japan?
>>1 There are more poverty crimes targeting Chinese people in Japan Unemployed man arrested for stabbing Chinese tourist and demanding “money” or threatening woman with knife, Osaka Prefectural Police investigating www.sankei.com/article/20240727-txl4mwwslfpilg2ntkfkvffwua/ On the 27th, Osaka Prefectural Police arrested an unemployed man (22) from Konohana Ward, Osaka City, on suspicion of violating the Act on Punishment of Violence, etc., for approaching and threatening a woman while showing a knife.
> Movements to belittle the Shenzhen incident Chinese people are being targeted in Japan, so it’s okay for China to target Japanese people. It’s not a belittling, it’s a justification.
Maybe they’re talking about Takarajima-san, gold nugget robbers, and other robbers. But generally the culprits are Koreans, ethnic Koreans, or Chinese in conflict. There’s even a theory that the police were involved in the robbery to get the insurance money. And when it comes to Chinese police, the scammers are either Chinese or real police spies, right?
Chinese people have a bad reputation in Japan these days. There are too many crimes committed by Chinese people. And Agnes Chan and Renho. The reason nothing is happening is because Japanese people are incredibly patient. However, there is a Japanese proverb that says even Buddha’s face can only be seen three times. How many times can Mao Zedong’s face be shown in China?
In Japan’s case, the government has not done anything to incite criticism of China, and even if there were incidents, they would be isolated cases that China would use as an excuse. In China’s case, the government is inciting anti-Japanese sentiment, and there is a possibility that Chinese people may have been inspired as a result, which is why it is considered a problem.
Within the next few days, a Chinese person will be attacked in Japan (for some reason the culprit will never be caught). This has resulted in counter attacks from China claiming that Japan has poor public safety, and the Japanese media writes more articles about how terrible hatred is towards Japanese people than about child murder cases.
They are just like Koreans in that when they are the perpetrators, they will try to become the victims even if it means lying. After all, China is a big Korea.
>>35 Historically in China and Korea, if you were the perpetrator and went to court, you were sure to lose and death awaited you. Therefore, we must become the victim and win the lawsuit no matter what. To achieve this, he will tell any lie. That’s apparently it.
In the near future, a Japanese person living in China may be arrested in China on charges such as “assaulting a Chinese child.” It’s easy to fabricate such a case in that country.
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