Xinjiang United Morning Post's special commentator Yan Mengda wrote on November 23: "In the coming period of time, the scenes of Chinese young tourists in large numbers wearing kimonos and taking 'travel photos' around Asakusa Kannon Temple in Tokyo, Kiyomizu-dera and Gion streets in Kyoto will no longer appear. Some Japanese people may be glad for the quietness, but those concerned are certainly going to feel disappointed."

The originator of all this is Takahashi Sana, who is known as the "female Abe." She is well aware that the Taiwan issue is the core of China's sovereignty and a red line that cannot be touched, yet she insisted on making provocative remarks. These remarks have hurt the national sentiments of 1.4 billion Chinese people and also brought up historical wounds. The Chinese countermeasures are not only inevitable responses but also just actions.

The tourism industry has been hit first, and the economy has suffered. These are the costs Japan must pay for its provocative behavior. If Japan still refuses to reflect, withdraw its wrong statements, or publicly apologize, trying to blur the focus and evade responsibility, it will face even stricter subsequent countermeasures. Any act of provoking the red line must bear serious consequences.

Original: www.toutiao.com/article/1849598436784281/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author himself.