What does Chairman Mao behind a surgical mask mean to you? Until recently, it was a convenient shorthand for the coronavirus outbreak and, linked to this, the impact the disease has had on Chinese governance and politics. In Nepal, however, following a sharply worded response by the Chinese ambassador to a Kathmandu newspaper, the image has come to signify the dangers of international pressure on the domestic press.
On 18 February 2020, the print edition of English-language daily The Kathmandu Post carried an op-ed titled 'China's secrecy has made coronavirus crisis much worse'. Previously published in the Seoul-based Korea Herald, the syndicated piece was authored by a former US ambassador to NATO and was predictably critical of China's handling of the coronavirus epidemic. The newspaper paired the op-ed with a stock photo showing Mao Tse Tung, as seen on the 100-yuan banknote, donning a surgical mask.
In response, the Chinese Embassy in Nepal released a statement saying The Kathmandu Post had "with a picture of malicious intention, deliberately smeared the efforts of the Chinese government and people fighting against the new coronavirus pneumonia and even viciously attacked the political system of China." The rejoinder was posted on Ambassador Hou Yanqi's Twitter account, which has rapidly amassed visibility since her posting in Kathmandu, a relatively new phenomenon for the Chinese mission.
It is, of course, natural for diplomatic missions to defend their countries and routinely dismiss critical media reports. In Pakistan, for instance, an investigative report on hundreds of Pakistani girls and women being sold as brides in China made headlines in late 2019. In response, the Chinese Embassy in Islamabad said the report was "the same old stuff and not true", adding "certain media has made groundless story again without full investigation and inrespect [sic] of the facts. Its intention is very suspicious." In the past, other embassies and governments in Southasian capitals have similarly objected, formally or informally, to critical news reports.