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Twitter Fact-Checks China Spokesman’s Tweets About Virus Origins

Twitter has applied a fact check tag to at least two posts by China Foreign Ministry Spokesman on the origins of Covid-19.

Twitter Fact-Checks China Spokesman’s Tweets About Virus Origins
The Twitter Inc. logo is seen in this arranged photograph. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Twitter has applied a fact check tag to at least two posts by China Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian, both of which advanced questions about whether the Covid-19 virus began in the U.S. rather than China.

The tags, at the base of the tweets originally posted in March, are marked with an exclamation point inside a circle and follow with text that reads “Get the facts about COVID-19”. Clicking the link takes a user to tweets about the virus origin, which emphasize that the virus appears to have originated in animals in China, rather than a virus laboratory in Wuhan, China.

The notification is similar to a fact check Twitter placed on tweets from U.S. President Donald Trump, in which he said California’s mail-in voting would be “substantially fraudulent” and result in a “rigged election.”

Zhao’s tweets “contain potentially misleading content” about the virus and have been labeled “to provide additional context to the public. These actions are in line with the approach we shared earlier this month,” a spokesperson from Twitter told Bloomberg.

The New York Post, which earlier reported the labels on Zhao’s tweets, said Twitter’s move Wednesday came after the newspaper pressed them about a possible double standard between Trump and the Chinese tweets.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.