Fake flyers and face-mask fear: California fights coronavirus
discrimination
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[February 14, 2020]
By Andrew Hay and Maria Caspani
(Reuters) - A flyer in Los Angeles' Carson
area, with a fake seal of the World Health Organization, tells residents
to avoid Asian-American businesses like Panda Express because of a
coronavirus outbreak. A Los Angeles middle schooler is beaten and
hospitalized after students say he is as an Asian-American with
coronavirus.
And over 14,000 people sign a petition urging schools in the Alhambra
area to close over coronavirus risks, even though there is only one case
of the virus in Los Angeles County, with its population of 10.1 million.
These are some of the hoaxes, assaults and rumors Los Angeles
authorities spoke out against on Thursday to stamp out anti-Asian
bigotry bubbling to the surface in California, where over half of the 15
U.S. coronavirus cases are located.
Bullying and assaults of Asian-Americans are being reported from New
York to New Mexico, sparked by unfounded fears that they are somehow
linked to a virus that originated in China.
With by far the largest Asian-American population of any U.S. state,
officials in California are aggressively trying to get ahead of such
hate crimes before they spread.
"We're not going to stand for hate," Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda
Solis told reporters, flanked by law enforcement officials. She urged
residents to report crimes to a special 211 number.
Existing prejudice against Asians has combined with media images from
China to create fears that Asian-Americans are more likely to be virus
carriers. The discrimination could get worse given chances the virus may
spread in U.S. communities in the weeks and months ahead, said Robin
Toma, head of the Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission.
Face masks commonly warn by Asians to protect against germs or prevent
their spread have become a flashpoint, with wearers insulted or attacked
out of fears they have the virus, he said at the news conference.
"We need you to step up and speak out when you see it happening to
others," he said.
FACE MASKS A TRIGGER
Anti-Asian sentiment emerged in 2003 during the outbreak of Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, which also originated from China. That
was before the emergence of social media platforms like Twitter, where
racism, hoaxes and slurs get amplified.
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A passerby wearing mask walks through Chinatown in New York, U.S.,
February 13, 2020. REUTERS/Yana Paskova
The issue is not isolated to California.
New York City designer Yiheng Yu works in an office where many
colleagues have recently returned from China and where she and
others wear face masks as a precaution.
On one occasion when she wore a mask outside her office she was
accosted by a woman.
"She started yelling, 'Are you Crazy? Get the heck out of here,"
said Yu, 34. "I realized it was because I was wearing a mask."
Even coughs can provoke fear, said Ron Kim, a New York state
assembly member representing a Queens district with a large Asian
and Asian-American population.
"I had a staff member who was in the Albany train station and she
was coughing a little bit and someone approached her asked if she
had the virus," said Kim, who on Feb. 7 established the Asian
American Health Advisory Council to educate New Yorkers about the
virus.
"We live in a very fear-driven society as it is, so if we add an
extra layer it's bound to happen, people are going to be ugly," he
added.
Manjusha Kulkarni, head of A3PCON, which represents Los Angeles
County's more than 1.5 million Asian-American and Pacific Islander
residents, saw an urgent need for information to separate
coronavirus fact from fiction.
"Businesses and restaurateurs have seen a steep decline in their
patronage," Kulkarni said of Asian proprietors. "We only have one
case of the coronavirus here in LA."
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in New Mexico and Maria Caspani in New
York; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Leslie Adler)
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