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US writer's post baking China's efforts draws global attention
2020-02-14 

Italian-American author Mario Cavolo might be known for his books about China, but it is one of his LinkedIn posts that has gone viral on the internet.

Based in Shenyang, Liaoning province, the writer had on Feb 5 written a commentary on the social networking site about the global reactions to China during the ongoing novel coronavirus outbreak.

Titled Something's Not Right Here Folks, the article delves into the overreaction of some Western governments, the discrimination against Chinese people and Western media coverage that discredits the Chinese government's efforts in controlling the epidemic. Cavolo also compares China's response to the novel coronavirus epidemic with the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in the United States, and highlights the contrasting reactions to the two health crisis.

An excerpt of his article, which has since been viewed more than a million times, reads, "During 2009 H1N1 outbreak, I don't recall xenophobic anti-America attacks across the globe, do you? Do you recall it took six months for the United States to declare a national emergency? Did any government from the onset in April 2009 through the end in April 2010, including the month of June, when H1N1 was declared an international emergency global pandemic, then send out a notice to its citizens that they should leave the US? Close their borders to American travelers? Nope, not a peep."

In an interview with China Daily on Wednesday, Cavolo explained what compelled him to write the post.

"Every country is great, and every country has problems, but when we read major headlines in the West, we find these negative slams, these negative bias… I felt tired of it, so I wrote the article," he said. "Surely enough, I struck a nerve in the hearts of people."

Italian-American author Mario Cavolo

Cavolo said that the majority of the comments on his post have been "super supportive", noting that many people agree with him that the reactions to the crisis and Western media coverage are not objective.

Maria Vesterlund, a former General Electric senior supply chain manager who is based in Shanghai, is among those who shares the same sentiment as Cavolo.

"We moved to Shanghai last year in August and now sadly face the same media pollution of gossips and panic information spread… I hear friends telling me they don't go to the local Chinese restaurants in Munich or Frankfurt — afraid of the coronavirus," she wrote in her comment on Cavolo's post.

"We stay here and do not run away…We feel with the people here, locals and expats who suffer the consequences, closing their shops, missing their incomes for living, staying home for weeks, not meeting friends, missing all the joy of life — to support the stop of spread around."

Born in Yonkers, New York, Cavolo moved to China in 1999 and worked as a consultant for various companies before starting his own business in public relations. He has written two books on China's economic boom and lived in several cities across the country, including Chengdu in Sichuan province, Hangzhou in Zhejiang province and Shanghai. He currently resides in Shenyang, his wife's hometown.

While Cavolo noted that China's management of the SARS epidemic in 2003 was not ideal, he pointed out that the authorities have learned from past experience and have responded better to the current crisis.

Cavolo said that it is important for people to empathize with the Chinese at this point in time and seek to uplift their spirits as they work to combat the virus. He also expressed confidence that the epidemic will pass by the time spring arrives.

"I think I will play the piano and do a victory concert in spring," he said. "There will be victory concerts all over the country and we will have a great time and things will be even better than people expect. Wuhan, stay strong! China, stay strong!" he quipped.

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