
CCTV
Yang Rui, host of CCTV-9's English-language talk show, Dialogue, is under fire for a microblog posting he made last week calling for the China to "Clean out foreign garbage."
By Ed Flanagan, NBC News
BEIJING â" Following recent high-profile examples of foreigners behaving badly in China, last week saw a spike of anti-foreigner sentiment that culminated in the announcement of a hundred day Beijing police crackdown on illegal immigration.
Among the commentators who applauded the crackdown was Yang Rui, a television host on Chinaâs state-run English-language TV network, CCTV-9. On his microblog on Chinaâs Twitter-like service, Weibo, Yang posted a bile-laden diatribe on how Chinaâs Public Security Bureau should deal with foreigners (Thanks to China Smack for the translation):
"The Ministry of Public Security must clean out foreign garbage, arrest foreign thugs and protect ignorant/innocent girls, with Wudaokou (popular student area in Beijing) and Sanlitun (bar & restaurant district in Beijing] being the disaster areas [worst places]. Behead the snake heads [human traffickers], the unemployed Americans and Europeans who come to China to make money, trafficking in people, misleading the public and encouraging them to emigrate. Identify the foreign spies, who find a Chinese woman to cohabitate with, while their job is to collect intelligence, drawing maps and perfecting GPS [coordinates] for Japan, Korea, Europe, and America under the guise of being tourists. Drive out the foreign shrew, shut down Al Jazeeraâs Beijing office, let those who demonize China shut their mouths!"
The vitriol in Yangâs post is appalling but is made all the more worse by his day job. Yang co-hosts âDialogue,â a current event news talk program in the vein of âMeet the Pressâ or the âCharlie Rose Show.â On his program, Yang invites foreign experts to discuss topical world and China-related news.
That Yang holds such inflammatory opinions of foreigners is worrying, given that heâs the host of one of CCTVâs more venerable news programs charged with providing a forum for the civil exchange of ideas and opinions between China and the outside world.
Ad hominem attacks on foreigners aside, particularly of concern are Yangâs charges that foreign spies have infiltrated China, at a time when Chinese suspicions of foreigners are already running high.
Yangâs comments come after a series of high-profile incidents that have provoked extreme nationalist rhetoric in public debate: sovereignty in the South China Sea, American re-commitment to Asia and the recent kidnapping of Chinese fishing vessels by North Korea.
Guests who have appeared on Yangâs show have contributed to the negative fall-out.
The Atlanticâs James Fallows â"who during his years in China occasionally appeared on the programâ" posted a piece on his blog about what it was like to appear on âDialogue.â
Similarly, Charlie Custer, founder of the tech blog China Geeks and a two-time guest on the show also expressed his outrage and even confronted Yang on Weibo about his post.
Yang responded on Weibo by calling for the Public Security Bureau to investigate Custer and even threatened to sue him.
One thing that is clear from the reaction registered by Fallows, Custer, and other foreign guests is that itâs about to get a little bit harder for Yang to find foreigners willing to appear on his show.
Explanation or apology?
NBC News attempted to call Yang; an email sent to him today went unanswered. But the embattled host penned a statement in todayâs edition of the Global Times, apparently as a response to a Wall Street Journal story about the incident.

CCTV
In this statement, Yang claimed his comments were a reaction to last weekâs news and a âwake-up callâ for both Westerners and Chinese people. While he acknowledged that there was a âsilent majority in the expat communities who obey and respect our culture and society,â by singling out the âforeign trash,â Yang argues he was âprotecting the reputation of decent Westerners.â
However, he stood by his comments on Al Jazeera and the âforeign shrew,â a reference to Al Jazeera correspondent, Melissa Chan, who earlier this month became the first foreign reporter to be expelled from China in more than a decade.
Yang remains unapologetic about his characterization of Chan, only making the point that translations of his post had mislabeled her âbâ"châ instead of âshrew.â
China is currently investing millions of dollars into what have been branded as âsoft powerâ initiatives, designed to improve the mainlandâs global standing. They include the development of enterprises such as CCTV America, Chinaâs new 24-hour cable news channel seen in the United States, which is meant to provide a more polished and China-centric interpretation of world news. Â Â
The success of such programming will rely significantly on Chinaâs willingness to provide a measured and open look at itself. But that willingness looks threatened by rhetoric such as Yang's.
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