Australian leader calls China’s graphic tweet ‘repugnant’
 
 
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Monday
a tweet by a Chinese official which shows a fake image of an Australian soldier
appearing to slit a child’s throat is “truly repugnant.”
Morrison said he is seeking an apology from the
Chinese government. The incident is further increasing tensions between the two
nations in a relationship that was already under strain.
The graphic image was posted Monday by Zhao Lijian,
a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry. It shows a grinning soldier
holding a bloodied knife to the throat of a veiled child, who is holding a
lamb.
Zhao wrote a caption with the tweet saying: “Shocked
by murder of Afghan civilians & prisoners by Australian soldiers. We
strongly condemn such acts, & call for holding them accountable.”
Zhao was referring to a disturbing report by
Australia’s military earlier this month which found evidence that elite
Australian troops unlawfully killed 39 Afghan prisoners, farmers and civilians
during the conflict in Afghanistan.
The report recommended 19 soldiers be referred to
federal police for criminal investigation.
Morrison said the tweet was “utterly outrageous” and
a terrible slur against Australia’s military.
It “is truly repugnant. It is deeply offensive to
every Australian, every Australian who has served in that uniform,” he told
reporters in Canberra. “The Chinese government should be totally ashamed of
this post. It diminishes them in the world’s eyes.”
Morrison said it had contacted Twitter asking them
to take the post down. The post had a warning tag on it Monday afternoon but
was still able to be viewed. Zhao’s account comes with a Twitter label stating
that it’s a Chinese government account.
Despite China blocking Twitter and other U.S. social
media platforms within the county, Chinese diplomats and state media have
established a strong presence on them.
Zhao was criticized by the U.S. in March after
tweeting a conspiracy theory that U.S. soldiers may have brought the
coronavirus to China. He is considered a leading representative of China’s
high-pitched new strain of assertive foreign relations.
Morrison acknowledged there were tensions between
China and Australia.
“But this is not how you deal with them,” he said.
“Australia has patiently sought to seek to address the tensions that exist in
our relationship in a mature way, in a responsible way, by seeking engagement
at both leader and ministerial level.”
The rift between the two nations has been growing
this year after the Australian government called for an independent inquiry
into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic. China has since imposed tariffs
on a number of Australian exports.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


