Taiwanese wife of US consul general targeted by Chinese netizens over ‘Nazi’ comparison

Taiwanese cookery writer bombarded by Chinese insults as US shuts down consulate in Chengdu

Taiwan News
Date: 2020/07/27
By: Ching-Tse Cheng, Taiwan News, Staff Writer

Taiwanese cookery writer Chuang Tzu-I (left) and her husband U.S. Consul General Jim Mullinax. (Facebook, Chuang Tzu-I photo)

TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — Taiwanese cookery writer and wife of U.S. Consul General Jim Mullinax, Chuang Tzu-I (莊祖宜), has received thousands of hostile comments from Chinese netizens following the closure of the American consulate in Chengdu.

In contrast to the relatively calm atmosphere outside of the U.S. consulate in Chengdu on Sunday (July 26), netizens on Chinese social media platform Weibo have been actively launching attacks against U.S. government officials and their family members. Chuang, who has raised two children with Mullinax and has nearly 600,000 followers on the network, was especially targeted for comparing her departure from the Chinese city of Chengdu in February to Jews fleeing the Nazis during World War II.

Some Weibo users referred to Chuang and Mullinax as spies and Taiwan independence activists, adding that they were not Jews and that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) shared no resemblance to the Nazis. Meanwhile, her complaint about her husband not being able to return home due to the coronavirus pandemic has also enraged Chinese netizens who accused her of exaggerating the situation for pity.

A few Chinese netizens mocked Chuang for being in the U.S., where they said the pandemic situation is the worst in the world. They also told her to get ready for the endless "racist attacks" by Americans, reported Liberty Times.    [FULL  STORY]

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