Overseas netizens
Netizens home and abroad are joining in the fight
through the Internet. To unveil the truth is their common objective.
Wang Ping, living in America for 6 years, is an
employee of a company. He read the reports about Lhasa riots from local media in
mid-March.
Wang: Although we don't learn so much about Tibet
riots, direct perception tells me it¡¯s wrong, because these media always
exaggerate reports on China's affair. When I telephoned with my friends at home,
I know some reports are fraud.
Under the influence from local media fake repots,
some professors with little knowledge about Tibet riots in America are publicly
support Tibet issue.
Wang: They (the professors) are totally ignorant of
fact. I feel so angry.
In order to let more people know about truth of Lhasa
riots, Wang started to collect materials and sent E-mails to these professors
respectively. I told them the average span of Tibetan people and the infant
mortality rate in the past and present. I will post some memories written by
Tibetan people on the Internet and let more people learn about Tibet.
During the interview, Wang always insisted that what
he could do is limited. To reveal the truth of Lhasa riot more Chinese living
overseas do what they could like Wang.
"The Lhasa riot has left a 'legacy' to the Chinese
people. It could also be seen as a mirror that reflected the true faces of some
people in the international community," said Qin Gang, the Foreign Ministry
Spokesman, in response to the different reactions of some western media and
Chinese netizens on the riot in Lhasa. "The coverage of the riots in Tibet by
some Western media was a textbook of bad examples, which we Chinese people can
learn from. What in all events are the so-called fairness and objectivity
boosted by some western media?
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