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Chinese social media companies condemn hate speech against Japanese after knife attack
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Chinese social media companies condemn hate speech against Japanese after knife attack
Jun 30, 2024 10:07 PM

SHANGHAI, July 1 (Reuters) - China's top social media

companies have condemned online hate speech targeting Japanese,

delivering a vigorous response to comments triggered by a knife

attack last week that killed one person and injured a Japanese

mother and child.

Such waves of sentiment, and a vocal nationalist element,

are not uncommon, but companies from WeChat-owner Tencent ( TCTZF )

, to TikTok's ByteDance-owned sister-site Douyin, Weibo ( WB )

and NetEase ( NTES ), condemned last week's remarks.

"These comments have disrupted the positive and peaceful

atmosphere of the platform and even incited unlawful behaviour,"

Douyin said in an online post on Sunday, citing "extreme and

erroneous statements" that were "promoting xenophobia".

In the latest of a series of knife attacks nationwide, a

Japanese mother and her pre-schooler were injured in the eastern

city of Suzhou while waiting for a school bus. A Chinese bus

attendant died of injuries suffered during a bid to intervene.

Anti-Japanese sentiment in China stems from bitter memories

of the neighbour's World War Two aggression, leading some to

celebrate the targeting of its citizens in the attack.

The extreme comments on Douyin stood out from the flood of

tributes that praised the heroism of the 55-year-old bus

attendant, Hu Youping, it added.

Tencent ( TCTZF ) said it had tackled 836 instances of related content

that infringed its rules.

"Some netizens incited confrontation between China and

Japan, provoked extreme nationalism, and concocted various

extreme remarks online," it said in online comments on Saturday.

State media also condemned the online hate speech.

"We will also not accept the hype of 'xenophobia' and hate

speech by individuals," the government-controlled People's Daily

said in an editorial on Friday. "This is unacceptable to

mainstream Chinese society and us Chinese."

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