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Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online

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Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online
Modi makes his social media debut in China.(Reuters/Rick Stevens)
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Lily Kuo@lilkuo
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4 hours ago
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi hasjoined China’s largest microblog (registration required), Weibo, in the latest friendly gesture between the two Asian giants as they juggle an on-and-off again rivalry.

So far, it isn’t going that well. As of Monday afternoon in China, Modi had about 13,000 fans on Weibo—a tiny following compared to Chinese actress Yao Chen who has77 million followerson the social network. (British prime minister David Cameron, who joined in 2013, has over800,000 fanson Weibo.) And responses to his greeting range from lukewarm to critical.

你好中国!期待通过微博与中国朋友们互动. Hello China! Looking forward to interacting with Chinese friends through Weibo.pic.twitter.com/yQcKn9bqTE

— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi)May 4, 2015

One of thetop comments(link in Chinese) under Modi’s greeting was “Hello Indian brother! Tibet belongs to China.” The two countries remain at loggerheadsover the Sino-Indian borderin a region in the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh that China refers to as “South Tibet.” A brief border war was fought in 1962 and incursions and skirmishes still occur today. Another blogger wrote “Tibet belongs to China,” and added 阿三, orA-san, a slangyChinese term for Indiansthat dates back to British colonialism.

Wary allies, Beijing and Delhi compete over everything frompartnerships in the region to howwater in the Himalayasshould be used. Modi’s Weibo profile photo may be aimed at projecting an image of strength. In it, he walks, unsmiling, flanked by his security detail.

modi-weibo-page.jpg

(Weibo)
Another blogger wrote, “Do not bully Pakistan. That is our little brother. Hitting Pakistan is like hitting us.” While several bypassed politics entirely, to ask the more friendly “Are you okay?”a meme based on the awkward English Xiaomi founder Lei Jun used at a recent event in New Delhi.

Modi is only the latest foreign politician to open a Weibo account to interact directly with the Chinese public. Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, former Australian prime ministerKevin Rudd as well as athletes like basketball players Metta World Peace and Kobe Bryant have all opened accounts over the past few years.

China’s own leaders have been reluctant to open themselves up to a public forum, even in China, and that appears to have made international leaders even more welcome, no matter what the politics. As one Chinesecommentator wroteto Modi, “Hello PM! Hope you can quickly get used to the bloodbath that is Weibo! Looking forward to interacting with you.”

Chinese leaders would likely get an even harsher skewering than Modi, if they were to join Weibo themselves. Oneblogger wroteon Modi’s page, “A foreign prime minister’s Chinese microblog. Where is the Chinese microblog of China’s premier?”



Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online – Quartz
 
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Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online
Modi makes his social media debut in China.(Reuters/Rick Stevens)
SHARE
WRITTEN BY

Lily Kuo@lilkuo
OBSESSION
Borders
4 hours ago
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi hasjoined China’s largest microblog (registration required), Weibo, in the latest friendly gesture between the two Asian giants as they juggle an on-and-off again rivalry.

So far, it isn’t going that well. As of Monday afternoon in China, Modi had about 13,000 fans on Weibo—a tiny following compared to Chinese actress Yao Chen who has77 million followerson the social network. (British prime minister David Cameron, who joined in 2013, has over800,000 fanson Weibo.) And responses to his greeting range from lukewarm to critical.

你好中国!期待通过微博与中国朋友们互动. Hello China! Looking forward to interacting with Chinese friends through Weibo.pic.twitter.com/yQcKn9bqTE

— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi)May 4, 2015

One of thetop comments(link in Chinese) under Modi’s greeting was “Hello Indian brother! Tibet belongs to China.” The two countries remain at loggerheadsover the Sino-Indian borderin a region in the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh that China refers to as “South Tibet.” A brief border war was fought in 1962 and incursions and skirmishes still occur today. Another blogger wrote “Tibet belongs to China,” and added 阿三, orA-san, a slangyChinese term for Indiansthat dates back to British colonialism.

Wary allies, Beijing and Delhi compete over everything frompartnerships in the region to howwater in the Himalayasshould be used. Modi’s Weibo profile photo may be aimed at projecting an image of strength. In it, he walks, unsmiling, flanked by his security detail.

modi-weibo-page.jpg

(Weibo)
Another blogger wrote, “Do not bully Pakistan. That is our little brother. Hitting Pakistan is like hitting us.” While several bypassed politics entirely, to ask the more friendly “Are you okay?”a meme based on the awkward English Xiaomi founder Lei Jun used at a recent event in New Delhi.

Modi is only the latest foreign politician to open a Weibo account to interact directly with the Chinese public. Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, former Australian prime ministerKevin Rudd as well as athletes like basketball players Metta World Peace and Kobe Bryant have all opened accounts over the past few years.

China’s own leaders have been reluctant to open themselves up to a public forum, even in China, and that appears to have made international leaders even more welcome, no matter what the politics. As one Chinesecommentator wroteto Modi, “Hello PM! Hope you can quickly get used to the bloodbath that is Weibo! Looking forward to interacting with you.”

Chinese leaders would likely get an even harsher skewering than Modi, if they were to join Weibo themselves. Oneblogger wroteon Modi’s page, “A foreign prime minister’s Chinese microblog. Where is the Chinese microblog of China’s premier?”



Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online – Quartz


As usual editing the head line .... ..
 
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India is being primed to counter China while Indians are smart enough to take the goodies but will not confront China. All this geopolitical tussle in South China Sea is good for both Pakistan and India since the different sides in SCS will will help them. Pakistan is not considered belligerent by all the SCS states as they share Pakistan anxiety being bullied by a powerful rising hegemonistic neighbor.
 
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India is being primed to counter China while Indians are smart enough to take the goodies but will not confront China. All this geopolitical tussle in South China Sea is good for both Pakistan and India since the different sides in SCS will will help them. Pakistan is not considered belligerent by all the SCS states as they share Pakistan anxiety being bullied by a powerful rising hegemonistic neighbor.
bhai saab hame bhi tho plague se bachna hain na, knowingly we cannot get infected, simple logic

Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online
Modi makes his social media debut in China.(Reuters/Rick Stevens)
SHARE
WRITTEN BY

Lily Kuo@lilkuo
OBSESSION
Borders
4 hours ago
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi hasjoined China’s largest microblog (registration required), Weibo, in the latest friendly gesture between the two Asian giants as they juggle an on-and-off again rivalry.

So far, it isn’t going that well. As of Monday afternoon in China, Modi had about 13,000 fans on Weibo—a tiny following compared to Chinese actress Yao Chen who has77 million followerson the social network. (British prime minister David Cameron, who joined in 2013, has over800,000 fanson Weibo.) And responses to his greeting range from lukewarm to critical.

你好中国!期待通过微博与中国朋友们互动. Hello China! Looking forward to interacting with Chinese friends through Weibo.pic.twitter.com/yQcKn9bqTE

— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi)May 4, 2015

One of thetop comments(link in Chinese) under Modi’s greeting was “Hello Indian brother! Tibet belongs to China.” The two countries remain at loggerheadsover the Sino-Indian borderin a region in the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh that China refers to as “South Tibet.” A brief border war was fought in 1962 and incursions and skirmishes still occur today. Another blogger wrote “Tibet belongs to China,” and added 阿三, orA-san, a slangyChinese term for Indiansthat dates back to British colonialism.

Wary allies, Beijing and Delhi compete over everything frompartnerships in the region to howwater in the Himalayasshould be used. Modi’s Weibo profile photo may be aimed at projecting an image of strength. In it, he walks, unsmiling, flanked by his security detail.

modi-weibo-page.jpg

(Weibo)
Another blogger wrote, “Do not bully Pakistan. That is our little brother. Hitting Pakistan is like hitting us.” While several bypassed politics entirely, to ask the more friendly “Are you okay?”a meme based on the awkward English Xiaomi founder Lei Jun used at a recent event in New Delhi.

Modi is only the latest foreign politician to open a Weibo account to interact directly with the Chinese public. Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, former Australian prime ministerKevin Rudd as well as athletes like basketball players Metta World Peace and Kobe Bryant have all opened accounts over the past few years.

China’s own leaders have been reluctant to open themselves up to a public forum, even in China, and that appears to have made international leaders even more welcome, no matter what the politics. As one Chinesecommentator wroteto Modi, “Hello PM! Hope you can quickly get used to the bloodbath that is Weibo! Looking forward to interacting with you.”

Chinese leaders would likely get an even harsher skewering than Modi, if they were to join Weibo themselves. Oneblogger wroteon Modi’s page, “A foreign prime minister’s Chinese microblog. Where is the Chinese microblog of China’s premier?”



Chinese bloggers are heckling Indian prime minister Modi online – Quartz
what do you think if chinese premier comes on indian account, will he he be showered with flowers and praises?
 
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Our masters called us 'little' what did we do to deserve this from our masters! We should beg them for more respect and equality! Maybe we must do more cheerleading to make them happy. Inshalla our masters will throw more money at us. We are ready to be their eternal slaves! We are a slave race just for Chinas pleasure!
 
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@BuddhaPalm
WHAT IS THIS?ANOTHER HUMILIATION ,ANOTHER SLAP IN THE FACE OF OUR HONORABLE PRIME MINISTER BY YOU CHINESE?WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?COMMUNIST !YOU ARE HUMILIATING LORD KRISHNA'S 21ST CENTURY AVATAR !WE VIRAT HINDUS WILL ANNIHILATE BEIJING !YOU WILL BURN JAY SHRI RAM
I will remind him to use a toilet like a human being while in China instead of defecating in the fields like back home.
 
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What happened to all those Chinese members here in pdf saying Modi's presence is so inconsequential that it doesn't even bother them enough to talk about him?
 
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I will remind him to use a toilet like a human being while in China instead of defecating in the fields like back home.


Yes teach him how to be human! My masters the Chinese race are the best examples of humanity using toilets! Long live China! We should learn from our masters.

Chinese teen mum dumps newborn son in toilet during work break | Daily Mail Online

That is the way Chinese master race uses toilets and we too should use toilets like that!

But be careful of made in China toilets:

Chinese man hospitalised after airport toilet COLLAPSED when he squatted on it | Daily Mail Online

Haha let Modi use Chinese toilets, he will die, then we will have party!
 
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@BuddhaPalm
WHAT IS THIS?ANOTHER HUMILIATION ,ANOTHER SLAP IN THE FACE OF OUR HONORABLE PRIME MINISTER BY YOU CHINESE?WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?COMMUNIST !YOU ARE HUMILIATING LORD KRISHNA'S 21ST CENTURY AVATAR !WE VIRAT HINDUS WILL ANNIHILATE BEIJING !YOU WILL BURN JAY SHRI RAM



What's up with CAPS LOCK MAHA-YUDH (war)... ??
 
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Narrow minded cent bots raking up territorial disputes, as if Modi can read Chinese or he handles directly.

All the best folks for "bullying".

#disgusting
 
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Good that they have someone in position of power to try to fruitlessly troll, its not as if anyone serious in China is ever going to expose themselves to their own people.

"Little brother" was funny though, is that really how the general Chinese perceives Pak?
 
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hahahahah a Pakistani with an Indian fake account and an Indian with a Pakistani fake account a in the same thread. :chilli:
 
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