請更新您的瀏覽器

您使用的瀏覽器版本較舊,已不再受支援。建議您更新瀏覽器版本,以獲得最佳使用體驗。

Eng

Nature magazine apologizes for linking Covid-19 with China

Inkstone

發布於 2020年04月10日13:04

British scientific journal Nature has apologized for associating Covid-19 with China in its reporting, saying that early coverage of the global health crisis by itself and other media had led to racist attacks on people of Asian descent around the world.

In an article published on Tuesday, the publication said that the World Health Organization's naming the disease caused by the new coronavirus "Covid-19" had been an implicit reminder to "those who had erroneously been associating the virus with Wuhan and with China in their news coverage " including Nature."

"That we did so was an error on our part, for which we take responsibility and apologize," it said.

"It's clear that since the outbreak was first reported, people of Asian descent around the world have been subjected to racist attacks, with untold human costs " for example, on their health and livelihoods."

Activists from Massachusetts' Asian American Commission protest against racist attacks on the steps of the Statehouse in Boston on March 12.
Activists from Massachusetts' Asian American Commission protest against racist attacks on the steps of the Statehouse in Boston on March 12.

The article said that while it had been common for viral diseases to be associated with the areas in which outbreaks had occurred " like Middle East respiratory syndrome and the Zika virus, which was named after a Ugandan forest " the WHO had introduced guidelines in 2015 to reduce the negative impact of such labeling on people from those areas.

The impact of a stigmatized virus name would have "worrying implications" for students from China and other countries in Asia, "hurting the diversity of university campuses and diversity of points of view in academia," it said.

"It would be tragic if stigma, fueled by the coronavirus, led Asia's young people to retreat from international campuses, curtailing their own education, reducing their own and others' opportunities and leaving research worse off " just when the world is relying on it to find a way out," it said. "Coronavirus stigma must stop " now."

As countries struggle to control the spread of the new coronavirus, a minority of politicians are sticking with the outdated scriptNature

US President Donald Trump repeatedly used the term "Chinese virus" in relation to the health crisis before dropping it last month after acknowledging there had been a rise in "nasty language" directed at the Asian-American community.

Signs that read 'suspend rent' and 'fear causes racism' are pictured on a boarded-up business in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood on March 29.
Signs that read 'suspend rent' and 'fear causes racism' are pictured on a boarded-up business in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood on March 29.

The coronavirus outbreak has led to an increase in reported racist abuse of people of Asian descent around the world, including in one case, three members of an Asian family in Texas, including two children, aged six and two, being stabbed.

"As countries struggle to control the spread of the new coronavirus, a minority of politicians are sticking with the outdated script," the Nature report said.

"Continuing to associate a virus and the disease it causes with a specific place is irresponsible and needs to stop."

Copyright (c) 2020. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

0 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0