Gansu government’s head-shaving publicity stunt backfires

Society & Culture

Gansu government's head-shaving publicity stunt backfires

The Chinese internet is on fire over a disturbing video via the Lanzhou Morning Post that shows a group of female health care workers in Gansu Province getting their heads shaved before leaving for Hubei to assist local medical staff in response to the COVID-19 epidemic.

Released on February 15 by the Lanzhou-based newspaper, the one-minute clipย (in Chinese)ย features a dozen female medical professionals from Gansu Provincial Maternity and Child-care Hospital getting buzzcuts. The video captures the entire process from start to finish, from the time they walk in to when they take a group photo before walking out. It appears to be a copycat of an earlier stunt pulled off by medical workers a week before in Xi’an, which Xinhua tweeted about:

Some of the Gansu women can be seen having a tough time holding back tears. At one point, a barber places huge chunks of hair in front of one of the women, who appears upset and turns her head away.

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โ€œHaving their hair cut off, they are fully equipped for an expedition,โ€ the newspaper wrote in a Weibo postย (in Chinese)ย accompanying the video. โ€œThank you, beautiful fighters!โ€

Judging from the caption, the video was supposed to be touching and inspiring. For the Gansu government, which orchestrated the scene as a public stunt, thereโ€™s little doubt that it wanted to use the womenโ€™s new looks as a statement of determination in battling the epidemic, and potentially garner some praise from the public.

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But the online reactions turned out to be quite the opposite of what they expected โ€” people loathed the video. They asked how this could have possibly been allowed to happen.

In an articleย (in Chinese)ย titled, โ€œPlease stop using womenโ€™s bodies as a propaganda tool,โ€ WeChat blogger Chรฉn Mรกshว” ้™ˆ้บป็ณฌ said that the video didnโ€™t strike her as encouraging or impressive. Instead, she felt that the medical workers were severely mistreated because head-shaving is historically and commonly used as a punishment for women who break the rules. โ€œNo one, even people who commit major crimes, deserves to have this mark of shame,โ€ she wrote in the article, which has more than 100,000 views and 31,000 likes so far. โ€œThese women are brave and wonderful people. Why were they treated this way, as if they were criminals?โ€

โ€œTheir tears are used as an anecdote of collectivism to arouse peopleโ€™s feelings,โ€ Chen wrote. โ€œI guess this is what government officials wanted. They really donโ€™t care if the head-shaving was against their wills.โ€

โ€œIt really boggles my mind that they didnโ€™t have the option of cutting their hair short,โ€ one Weibo user wroteย (in Chinese). โ€œThey are going to Wuhan to save patients, not to receive punishment in labor camps.โ€

โ€œIt seems like some government officials really craved big news to satisfy their desire for a media moment,โ€ another Weibo user commented.