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Chinese travelers see US as 'violent' and 'racist'

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•According to the research, 22% of mainland Chinese respondents are "not interested at all" in visiting the US, with an additional 23% saying they are "not that interested."


•Of the survey respondents, 57% say that violent crime is a primary reason they don't want to go to the US, while 52% cite terrorism.



Cannon Yu lives in Shantou, Guangdong province.


In the past, her sales job at a packaged-foods company took her to business conferences all over the world. But she hasn't left China since early 2020 and is taking her sales calls online instead of in person in Thailand, Germany, Morocco and elsewhere.


While most countries have reopened their borders and resumed travel back to previous pre-Covid levels, China has remained extremely conservative in its approach and continues to adhere to the uncompromising "zero-Covid" policy.


While those policies keep Chinese people in, they also keep most foreigners out, making it less likely for people like Yu to interact with people from other countries.


And although China still hasn't announced a plan for removing quarantine and other roadblocks for international travel, Yu can't wait to get back on the road and travel again.


There's one exception, though -- she has major reservations about visiting the United States. 


How the East looks at the West


Scott Moskowitz, geopolitical risk analyst for APAC at the decision intelligence company Morning Consult, says that media in China has played up examples of anti-Asian violence in the US in order to make its citizens less interested in going there.


It's "a curated ecosystem that over-reports and sensationalizes negative foreign news compared to the tight controls on domestic coverage," he says.


And Yu's beliefs bear that out.


"They look at people discriminately (there)," she says. "Not only for Chinese, but for Black people. It's very difficult to get fair treatment for all people in the United States."

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She adds that she has spoken to friends who have visited the US, claiming that they were detained and searched by customs agents before being allowed to leave the airport.


Yu is one of an increasingly vocal community of Chinese travelers who say that anti-Asian discrimination in the US has made them afraid to visit someday.


This month, Morning Consult published a study on this exact trend. Their findings, based on a survey of 1,000 adults, showed that "a plurality of Chinese have little to no interest in US travel," with violence and anti-Asian discrimination both cited as factors.


According to Morning Consult's data, 22% of mainland Chinese respondents are "not interested at all" in visiting the US, with an additional 23% saying they are "not that interested."


Of the survey respondents, 57% say that violent crime is a primary reason they don't want to go to the US, while 52% cite terrorism, 36% say petty crime and 44% say they are concerned about anti-China bias by locals.


Mass shootings are another specific concern, with "those who have seen, read or heard about the schoo‍l shooting in Uvalde, Texas" earlier this year "far more likely to cite violent crime as a reason not to travel" to the country, Morning Consult says in its report.


Instead, some Chinese travelers are now looking elsewhere, with destinations in Europe clearly preferred over the US, according to the survey.


The rise of violence


Amid the pandemic, there has been an increase in anti-Asian harassment around the world, much of it the result of misinformation or misplaced aggression about the origins of Covid-19.


The nonpartisan coalition Stop AAPI Hate provides a place for people to report harassment and attacks.


Perhaps the most covered anti-Asian hate attack in the United States since the start of the pandemic was the "Atlanta spa murders," during which eight women in three different massage parlors were shot and killed by Robert Aaron Long, a White man. Six of the eight victims were Asian, and Long was charged with hate crimes in addition to the murders.


Last year, New York Congresswoman Grace Meng introduced the Covid-19 Hate Crimes bill, which was signed into law by President Joe Biden.


Meng, who is of Taiwanese descent, represents parts of Queens, the diverse New York City borough that is home to many Asian Americans.


These incidents -- which range from street harassment to physical violence -- get significant coverage outside of the US, including in China.


Moskowitz says that the perception that the US is China's biggest rival has only heightened attention to stories of anti-Asian discrimination or violence in the country, even though similar incidents also take place elsewhere.


"This differential is especially exaggerated in terms of media reporting on the US as compared to Europe and other places. Some of this is strategic and intentional, curated in order to diminish the appeal and soft power of the country China sees as its great rival, both politically and ideologically," he tells CNN Travel.


"There are strong perceptions in China that there is a lot of global bias against their country," Moskowitz adds. "Personal and national identity are very strongly tied in China so there may be concerns that more macro and political grievances and resentments (both real and perceived) with a country will be turned back towards the individual when traveling abroad."


As for Cannon Yu, she's still eager to travel anywhere outside of China once it becomes less difficult.


Despite everything, she is still curious about the US and hopes to eventually see it for herself.


In particular, there's one place on her bucket list -- Las Vegas. "I want to gamble," she says. And then, after a pause, she continues: "I want to make friends."


Source: CNN
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