China Accuses BBC Of ‘Fake News’ Over Floods ReportingChina has Accused BBC Of ‘Fake News’ Over Floods reportage

China on Thursday launched a devastating attack on the BBC, accusing it of broadcasting ‘fake news’ while claiming that the organisation was ‘naturally unpopular’ over its coverage of devastating floods in central China.

The broadside by the foreign ministry is coming after the BBC called out Beijing while urging them to put a stop to the harassment of its journalists by nationalists who have accused foreign media of biased reporting.

Days of heavy rain last week sparked record flooding in the central province of Henan that has claimed the lives of at least 99 people.

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The BBC said its reporters covering the deluge had been subjected to online vitriol, while other outlets had been harassed on the ground in “attacks which continue to endanger foreign journalists”.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian on Thursday called the broadcaster a ‘Fake News Broadcasting Company” that has “attacked and smeared China, seriously deviating from journalistic standards’.

Zhao said the BBC deserved to be ‘unpopular with the Chinese public’ and ‘there is no such thing as hatred without reason’.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that the war of words erupted after a youth branch of China’s ruling Communist Party on Tuesday posted comments online calling on its 1.6 million followers to track the movements of BBC reporters.

The comments by the Henan Communist Youth League spurred death threats against BBC correspondents from nationalistic internet users.

A year’s rain was dumped on the city of Zhengzhou in just three days last week, leaving 14 people dead and more than 500 commuters trapped when the city’s subway system flooded during rush hour.

City and provincial officials have faced calls for accountability, with the wife of one of the subway victims telling local media she would sue the metro operator for negligence.

But despite calls for transparency, foreign journalists have been met with increased hostility as sensitivity towards any negative portrayal of China mounts.

 

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK