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Japanese athletes face Chinese nationalists' wrath after beating China at Olympics

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Japanese athletes face Chinese nationalists' wrath after beating China at Olympics

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Hong Kong (CNN)Some of Japan's victorious Olympic athletes have been subjected to a storm of online abuse from Chinese nationalists following the defeat of their Team China opponents in Tokyo.

As of Friday afternoon in Japan, China and the hosts occupied the top two places in the medal table, with a number of events pitting Chinese athletes directly against their longtime rivals for places on the podium. And that's raised temperatures on social media.

On Wednesday, Japan's Daiki Hashimoto won gold in the men's all-around gymnastics final, edging out China's Xiao Ruoteng by 0.4 points. At just 19 years old, Hashimoto is the youngest gymnast to ever win the event.

As Japan celebrates his victory, some in China questioned the fairness of the result and accused the judges of favoritism toward the hosts by allegedly inflating Hashimoto's score on the vault.

The anger, first set off on Chinese social media, soon spilled over to platforms typically censored in China. Chinese nationalist trolls circumvented the Great Firewall and descended on Hashimoto's Instagram account, inundating his feed with angry comments and tagging him in insulting posts.
Many called Hashimoto Japan's "national humiliation," while others accused him of stealing China's gold medal. Some even tagged him in photos of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Some of the accounts attacking Hashimoto appeared to be created specially for this purpose, with their entire feeds filled with posts targeting the Japanese gymnast.

Hashimoto later changed the privacy settings on Instagram, so he could no longer be tagged on the platform -- but angry comments have kept pouring in under his posts.

The attacks and harassment are emblematic of the rising tide of ultranationalism sweeping through social media in China, which has silenced many of the country's more liberal and moderate voices online. The nationalist sentiment against Japan has often flared, due to deep-rooted rancor against Japan's invasion of China in World War II.


A wider problem
The nationalist rage against Hashimoto followed attacks on Mima Ito and Jun Mizutani, the Japanese table tennis duo who narrowly defeated the Chinese team to win the first-ever gold medal in mixed doubles Monday.

On Wednesday, Mizutani said on Twitter that he had received a torrent of messages attacking him, without directly mentioning China.

"Got tons of DM from a country telling me to 'Go to hell! P*ss off!', but I'm totally OK as I'm used to such comments. I'm just happy that I got the whole word excited. All messages from Japanese are cheering me, thank you!" he wrote in the tweet, which was later deleted.

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Other Chinese netizens criticized the online abuse and called for an end to it, but they were also attacked.
In recent years, Chinese nationalists have launched massive online trolling campaigns against those they regard as Beijing's political foes, including Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen and Hong Kong's pro-democracy protesters. They also lashed out at Australian Olympic swimmer Mack Horton at the 2016 Rio Games, after he called China's Sun Yang a "drug cheat."

Following the latest controversy, the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) issued a statement Thursday expounding on Hashimoto's score, including a detailed list of the imperfections.

"The FIG can assess that the 14.7 score obtained by Hashimoto on this apparatus is correct in regards to the Code of Points, and so is the final ranking," the statement concluded.

In an Instagram post on Thursday evening, Hashimoto expressed gratitude for the support he received, while acknowledging he had received abusive comments on social media.

"You may think the score of the Vault might be unfair, but FIG has given its verdict on the official scoring result...We have to accept the result as it is even it is very difficult to take in," he wrote.

"The Tokyo Olympics is not over yet...I do hope there will be less smear comments and more praises for the athletes," he added, sharing a photo of himself, Xiao and the Russian Olympic Committee's Nikita Nagornyy posing together with medals.

Ito, who has an account on Weibo, China's heavily censored version of Twitter, had to shut down her feed due to an onslaught of hate comments. She was also attacked on Instagram, where fans have organized themselves to support her against the abuse, leaving encouraging comments and tagging her in positive posts to drown out hate messages.

The attacks have since drawn wide attention in Japan, making headlines and sparking anger on social media.

Speaking at a news conference Thursday, Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said he was aware of the incidents, although not the details.

"We, as the government, believe any discrimination should not be allowed," he said. "It is also against the Tokyo Olympics' spirits. We ask everyone to let the athletes to concentrate on their matches so they can do their best."

Elsewhere, other Olympic athletes have also faced social media trolling, including America's Simone Biles.

Biles, one of the greatest gymnasts of all time, withdrew from the individual all-around competition this week to focus on her mental health. While the 24-year-old has received an outpouring of support for her decision, she has also been viciously attacked by trolls.

On Twitter, some Indian swimmers were trolled for failing to qualify for the semifinals.

Addressing the problem at a news conference Friday, International Olympic Committee (IOC) spokesperson Mark Adams said he didn't think the IOC could give advice to athletes individually, but he stressed that online abuse has "no place in sport."
"Such trolling...or aggression is really, really not acceptable and we would completely go against that and support the athletes in every way," he said.

 
The gymnastics competition had a biased Indian judge who made racist tweets about Chinese people just before judging the event where Hashimoto won narrowly.

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I don't blame Japan at all. There's clear allocation of blame. A judge clearly expressed his intent to be biased.
 
The gymnastics competition had a biased Indian judge who made racist tweets about Chinese people just before judging the event where Hashimoto won narrowly.

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I don't blame Japan at all. There's clear allocation of blame. A judge clearly expressed his intent to be biased.

Two years earlier at the military world games is not exactly 'just before' as you suggest. But it does suggest some possible bias on the part of one judge but that is difficult to prove.

Meanwhile.....


Chinese state media on Friday walked back its accusations of biased judging in the men’s all-around gymnastics event after silver medalist Xiao Ruoteng asked his fans not to “attack other athletes who have fought hard for their goals.”
On Thursday, Chinese state media played up accusations of favoritism towards Japanese gold medalist Hashimoto Daiki from “netizens” on China’s heavily censored, tightly controlled social media. Hashimoto narrowly bested Xiao for the gold after both gave superb performances with a few minor mistakes. Chinese “netizens,” with the blessing and support of state media, claimed the judges went hard on Xiao’s slip-ups while giving Hashimoto a pass for his.
China’s latest ugly conspiracy theory was refined on Thursday to more specific allegations that Xiao was wronged by Indian referee Deepak Kabra because he wrote a tweet during the 2019 Military World Games in which he said the Chinese team was dominating the competition and “someone should stop them from a clean sweep.”
This rather anodyne bit of boosterism loomed large in the imagination of Chinese netizens thanks to the ongoing military, economic, and political tensions between India and China. For the conspiracy theorists, an Indian judge snatching victory away from a Chinese Olympic athlete was an irresistible storyline.
The 2019 Military World Games were held in Wuhan, China, a city that would go on to become famous for other reasons.
For his part, Xiao wrote social media posts and gave interviews in which he threw cold water on the heated allegations of bias and displayed a little good sportsmanship toward Hashimoto, at which point Chinese state media and its legion of netizen robots suddenly flipped to praising his gracious spirit and making allowances for the difficulty of judging high competitive athletic events.
From the state-run Global Times on Friday:

“Everyone in the world has different opinions, athletes have theirs too… And it was great to get the recognition from supporters… But I hope people don’t attack other athletes, who have fought hard for their goals,” Xiao said in a Sina Weibo post on Thursday, in which he added photos with Japanese and Russian athletes on the podium.
In an interview with Sina Sports on Wednesday, Xiao said he would not deny his efforts, as he showed the spirit of Chinese athletes through the Olympic Games. “I don’t hate the champion. We’re just athletes,” Xiao told Sina Sports. Compared to his first Weibo post after the match, under which netizens criticized the referee and the Japanese athletes, many praised Xiao for his generosity in the post above.
“You are the champion in my heart. Great athletes have superb skills but also excellent and admirable work ethic and character, and you have them all,” an internet user said.
The Global Times, which 24 hours earlier was muttering about the strong evidence of bias against Xiao by the judges in Tokyo – it was an anti-Japanese conspiracy theory before it mutated to become the even more contagious India Variant – suddenly began quoting commentators who explained how judges see things that arena and TV spectators cannot, and understand the “sophisticated rules” of Olympic competition much better than armchair blowhards.
“There is no need to put the Olympics on the table of parochial nationalism and bashing, which is against the Olympic spirit. Viewers need to understand what is to be maintained and promoted in the Olympics and what is not to be allowed,” sports commentator Wang Dazhao told the Global Times.
Wang added the perception of “unfairness” is amplified by athletes losing the “opportunity to adapt to the referees in advance” because so many competitions have been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

 
Two years earlier at the military world games is not exactly 'just before' as you suggest. But it does suggest some possible bias on the part of one judge but that is difficult to prove.

Meanwhile.....


Chinese state media on Friday walked back its accusations of biased judging in the men’s all-around gymnastics event after silver medalist Xiao Ruoteng asked his fans not to “attack other athletes who have fought hard for their goals.”
On Thursday, Chinese state media played up accusations of favoritism towards Japanese gold medalist Hashimoto Daiki from “netizens” on China’s heavily censored, tightly controlled social media. Hashimoto narrowly bested Xiao for the gold after both gave superb performances with a few minor mistakes. Chinese “netizens,” with the blessing and support of state media, claimed the judges went hard on Xiao’s slip-ups while giving Hashimoto a pass for his.
China’s latest ugly conspiracy theory was refined on Thursday to more specific allegations that Xiao was wronged by Indian referee Deepak Kabra because he wrote a tweet during the 2019 Military World Games in which he said the Chinese team was dominating the competition and “someone should stop them from a clean sweep.”
This rather anodyne bit of boosterism loomed large in the imagination of Chinese netizens thanks to the ongoing military, economic, and political tensions between India and China. For the conspiracy theorists, an Indian judge snatching victory away from a Chinese Olympic athlete was an irresistible storyline.
The 2019 Military World Games were held in Wuhan, China, a city that would go on to become famous for other reasons.
For his part, Xiao wrote social media posts and gave interviews in which he threw cold water on the heated allegations of bias and displayed a little good sportsmanship toward Hashimoto, at which point Chinese state media and its legion of netizen robots suddenly flipped to praising his gracious spirit and making allowances for the difficulty of judging high competitive athletic events.
From the state-run Global Times on Friday:

The Global Times, which 24 hours earlier was muttering about the strong evidence of bias against Xiao by the judges in Tokyo – it was an anti-Japanese conspiracy theory before it mutated to become the even more contagious India Variant – suddenly began quoting commentators who explained how judges see things that arena and TV spectators cannot, and understand the “sophisticated rules” of Olympic competition much better than armchair blowhards.
“There is no need to put the Olympics on the table of parochial nationalism and bashing, which is against the Olympic spirit. Viewers need to understand what is to be maintained and promoted in the Olympics and what is not to be allowed,” sports commentator Wang Dazhao told the Global Times.
Wang added the perception of “unfairness” is amplified by athletes losing the “opportunity to adapt to the referees in advance” because so many competitions have been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.


Nobody is attacking Hashimoto here. He may very well have won gold based on his merits alone. But there will always be a question mark here due to the proven biased intent of the Indian judge.

Btw, Indian judges also found Japanese war criminals not guilty.
 
Western media is the toxicl shyt stirrer.

Midget Japan is neva in same league as China in sport. You don't compare maggot with elephant.

This time they cheat by hosting many judo.

Next Olympic their Gold will be close to zero.
 
Western media is the toxicl shyt stirrer.

Midget Japan is neva in same league as China in sport. You don't compare maggot with elephant.

This time they cheat by hosting many judo.

Next Olympic their Gold will be close to zero.

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Stupid CNN selective article. Picking on a few extreme Chinese post and then claim as mainstream opinion of Chinese. There are also many cases of Taiwanese impersonate as mainlander poster and post stupid remark to make China looks ridiculers.

Most Chinese post are still rational regards to this table tennis match. Mima Ito who is occasionally train in China are well received by Chinese fans.
 
You should have added CNN to the headline so I wouldn't have to waste my time clicking on this post.
 
Actually as the hosting country, I expected Japan to rank number 2 in the medal list beating all countries barring from US , never expected a host country can end up this bad.
 
Btw, Indian judges also found Japanese war criminals not guilty.

Mr. bad-at-history should stick to sissy olympic jabbing.

Radhabinod Pal did acknowledged class B and C war crimes. He, and only he, was against the A class which was about whose fault was it for starting the Pacific War when all other judges were going to act like internet trolls and place all 100% blame for starting the Pacific war soley on Japan. However back to the class B and C war crimes, he argued as to why should those be prosecuited if the a-bombs, and global colonization were to not be prosecuited at all? In other words, the objective of Tokyo Trials was anything but impartial judgement.

And the funny thing is that CKS was US/GB-backed and the CCP was SU-backed. For all the current anti westerner rhetoric coming out now, back then, Japan was the only Asian power that could stand up against the other powers. The CCP in 1935 and 1936 was a fraction of what they were in the years 1930 to 1934 and were successful in knocking out the Nationalist growing lead by capturing CKS and forcing a so-called second united front against Japan for an all out total war which had not started.

So then comes US lines of credits starting in the 1938 if I recall correctly but getting larger in the following years and GB setting up the Burma road, those two countries line themselves up for total war with Japan and as the Pacific War runs its course, Japan fighting the US, GB, Australia, China, and the SU and meets total defeat and break up.. today the Pro-China posters criticize Japan for being western yet also say in complete agrrement with those same western powers about Japan deseaving being reduced to just the four islands and a status of being powerless. If the Pro-China posters were really consistant and Pro-Asia, they would on their own recognize with some prize for Japan to have been able to become a force to be reckoned with in regards to the other powers. Instead they echo Tokyo Tribunal rhetoric.
 
So then comes US lines of credits starting in the 1938 if I recall correctly but getting larger in the following years and GB setting up the Burma road, those two countries line themselves up for total war with Japan and as the Pacific War runs its course, Japan fighting the US, GB, Australia, China, and the SU and meets total defeat and break up.. today the Pro-China posters criticize Japan for being western yet also say in complete agrrement with those same western powers about Japan deseaving being reduced to just the four islands and a status of being powerless. If the Pro-China posters were really consistant and Pro-Asia, they would on their own recognize with some prize for Japan to have been able to become a force to be reckoned with in regards to the other powers. Instead they echo Tokyo Tribunal rhetoric.
What a bunch of crap, if Japan were defending their own country from western aggression , invasion and intimiation like what China is doing now, it would be very commendable, but Japan learned from the west trying to invade and colonize fellow Asian nations and you expect appreciation from the invaded and ravaged nations by Japanese imperialists? Are you Ok?
 
Woke Olympics, every year the competitions are becoming ridiculous specially from all the Trans people and poor judges.
 
What a bunch of crap, if Japan were defending their own country from western aggression , invasion and intimiation like what China is doing now, it would be very commendable, but Japan learned from the west trying to invade and colonize fellow Asian nations and you expect appreciation from the invaded and ravaged nations by Japanese imperialists? Are you Ok?

From those that are able to discern the meaning of the words they are reading (I didn't say appreciation but said "some praise") there's a nuance that a senior poster should understand and are geopolitically/militarily literate (as in not one of the easily exploited masses -- try not to play as one now really...if you really are, then your post count far exceeds your worth in the matters of geopolitics and military.)
 
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