City
Epaper

China's social media platform Weibo propagating pro-Russian narratives on Ukraine crisis

By ANI | Published: February 23, 2022 5:37 PM

China's social media platform Weibo has become a new front in Russia and Ukraine tensions as it is trying to propagate pro-Russian and anti-Western narratives.

Open in App

China's social media platform Weibo has become a new front in Russia and Ukraine tensions as it is trying to propagate pro-Russian and anti-Western narratives.

On Tuesday, Horizon News, a subsidiary of Beijing News (state-media) accidentally posted censorship directives (that it may have received) on how to cover the Ukraine situation on its Weibo page.

It is a very important post because it gives us a rare window to look into how the narratives in social media are controlled through state media outlets.

The post said that any content showing Russia unfavourably as well as any pro-Western content would not be published.

It also says "Show me (the news item) before posting it for the first time. The comment section is to be controlled with featured comments. Enable top comments first, and then pick out the appropriate ones, make sure they are responsible for what they comment. Really pay attention to the comments. Keep your eyes on each post for at least two days. Ensure proper handover. If you are running a topic (hashtag), only use it from People's Daily, Xinhua and CCTV."

As of Wednesday, conspicuously no hashtags related to the Ukraine issue can be found even in the top 20 Weibo trends which shows that the authorities are trying to suppress discussion on the Ukraine issue on Chinese social media.

However, news related to the situation is being shared by Weibo accounts of state media outlets with hashtags such as "#Putin recognizes the independence of eastern Ukrainian civilian armed areas" and "#Change in Russian Ukrainian situation", "#Russia will provide military assistance to the two eastern Ukrainian regions".

Further, on Tuesday, two hashtags were trending on Weibo, at number 7 is "#Ukraine released a statement on Weibo".

With the sudden announcement of Russia recognizing "the Luhansk People's Republic (LPR)" and "the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR)" as independent and sovereign states, the Ukraine Embassy to China released a statement concerning the issue in Chinese, bringing the issue to a top trending topic on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo, reported Global Times.

Another was "#Ukraine" under which the news is reported in a fairly non-partisan way till now just stating the facts. State media Weibo accounts are putting independence inside quotation marks.

The ''Ukraine issue'' became a hot topic on Weibo on Tuesday, with some 900 million views and prompting nearly 200,000 discussions, reported Global Times.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: The Bone Shard DaughterBeijing newschinaSina WeiboDonetsk
Open in App

Related Stories

Social ViralChina: Glass Maintenance Workers Trapped Hanging From Building in Beijing After Sudden Strong Winds; Video Surfaces

InternationalEU, 26 Countries Support Taiwan at World Health Assembly Despite China’s Attempt to Prevent Them From Being Invited in Past Years

InternationalChina Cracks Down on Flamboyant Influencers in Social Media Wealth Purge

InternationalUnited States Lawmakers Support Taiwan After China’s Military Drills

InternationalTaiwan Detects Significant Chinese Military Presence Around Nation (See Tweet)

International Realted Stories

InternationalNorth Korea sends more 600 trash balloons into South Korea, confirms Seoul military

International"God made it happen...": US 2024 Spelling Bee winner, Indian-origin Bruhat Soma reveals how he memorised 80 pc of Bhagavad Gita

InternationalTerror network busted in Afghanistan

InternationalUkraine's President Zelenskyy meets US Defence Secretary on sidelines of Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore

InternationalIndia extends humanitarian assistance to Cuba, including 90 tonnes of nine 'Made in India' active pharmaceutical ingredients