Blow for China’s CCP Virus Diplomacy as Friendship Song Leaves Filipinos Furious

Blow for China’s CCP Virus Diplomacy as Friendship Song Leaves Filipinos Furious
Customers wearing facemasks queue outside a grocery in Manila, Philippines, on April 23, 2020. Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
Reuters
Updated:
MANILA—A music video produced by China to promote its support for neighbors battling the CCP virus has backfired in the Philippines, attracting a flood of public criticism and an online petition that is fast attracting signatures.

China’s embassy released the song by diplomats, singers and an actor last week, but the lyrics and title of “One Sea,” or “Iisang Dagat” in the Philippine language, has not gone down well with some Filipinos, many of whom see China as a maritime aggressor in disputed waters.

On the afternoon of April 27, the video posted last week on YouTube with the hashtag #CNPHHealAsOne had 149,000 dislikes compared with 2,100 likes, while a Change.org petition demanding the video be taken down had more than 8,000 respondents.

Medical personnel test a woman for COVID-19 using a rapid antibody testing kit, at a school converted into a mass testing facility in Manila, Philippines, on April 24, 2020. (Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)
Medical personnel test a woman for COVID-19 using a rapid antibody testing kit, at a school converted into a mass testing facility in Manila, Philippines, on April 24, 2020. Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

Social media critics vented their fury at what they saw as Chinese propaganda to conceal bullying in the South China Sea and branded Filipinos involved in the song as traitors.

“We have to stop the evil of China spreading,” wrote Leonard Anthony Arcilla. “We do not unify with China,” said Elna Lynda Acuerdo, while Venus Liwanag said the video was “slapping the faces of each Filipino.”

The song is dedicated to front-line health workers of both countries, some of whom appear in the video with footage of Chinese doctors and donated health supplies, including hundreds of thousands of protective masks and testing kits.

The lyrics include lines like “because of your love that flows like waves hand in hand, we move to a bright future, you and I are in one sea.”

A medical personnel unloads patients to be tested for COVID-19 at a mass testing facility in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines, on April 24, 2020. (Ezra Acayan/Getty Images)
A medical personnel unloads patients to be tested for COVID-19 at a mass testing facility in San Juan, Metro Manila, Philippines, on April 24, 2020. Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

The Philippine response is another indication of China’s CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus diplomacy struggling against a history of disputes and mistrust, particularly in Southeast Asia, where its assertive maritime presence, and building of islands and military installations, has unnerved neighbors.

Some people were instead trying to generate likes and shares for a music video from last year produced by artists from the Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia called “save our seas,” which takes aim at China’s maritime conduct.

The Philippines last week filed diplomatic protests accusing China of locking radar on a Philippine navy boat and rejecting its formation of an administrative unit in disputed areas, following a similar move by Vietnam.

It also comes amid unease over China’s deployment of coastguard and survey vessels that have disrupted Malaysian drilling operations, and the arrival of Australian and U.S. warships in the area.

There are also signs of growing solidarity among internet users in Thailand and elsewhere in Southeast Asian with Taiwan and Hong Kong, with old tension being fanned by the emergence of the new CCP virus.

By Martin Petty. Epoch Times staff contributed to this report.