Photos Posted by two Chinese government accounts on social networks are deleted after sarcasing the tragedy of Covid-19 India.
A social network account is related to the Chinese Communist Party on May 1 of May 1 that compares the successful launch of China's Thermal Space Station Module with the scene of the cremation of people who died for Covid-19 in India
The image is published by the Commission on the Weibo's political and legal issues with the annotation "China fire group compares to Indian fire group", with Hashtag note CAVID-19 CA Number in India
The post compares the "Fire God" China and India (left) of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security, along with the post "China fire group with India fire group" of the Commission of the Central Committee for Political and Legal issues
The official account of the Chinese Ministry of Public Security on April 30 also posted another image, comparing China's "Fire God", the fuel hospital name was built in Wuhan to fight Covid-19,
Both posts were deleted after many Weibo users, China's largest social network, expressed anger because of the insensitivity they show.
"I think that social network accounts of some Chinese government organizations or indian sarcastic effects are inappropriate," Ho Rui Tien, Chief Editor
It should have been "so he should raise the humanitarian flag now, expressing goodwill to India, putting Chinese society to a high moral foundation," he said.
The spirit of ethnicism is rising in both countries in the context of two countries arising disputes in the common border area in Himalaya.
"We hope everyone pays attention to the Chinese government and the official public opinion supports the war against Pandemic India," said a Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman about deleting posts.
Chinese President Tap Nu Binh sent condolences to Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi, offered to support India to cope with a lack of oxygen and other necessities.
India falls into the Covid-19 crisis when noting more than 300,000 cases per day for 12 consecutive days, with a total number of infections up to 20 million.