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BANGKOK, Thailand -- A brawl over COVID-19 has erupted between the
	American and Chinese embassies after President Trump's newly appointed
	ambassador blamed China for spreading a "vicious and dangerous
	conspiracy theory," prompting a Chinese envoy to hit back, blasting
	the ambassador's "smear" and "lies".
	
	Newly arrived U.S. Ambassador to Thailand Michael DeSombre began the
	harsh confrontation by issuing a 700-word statement published in Thai
	media on March 21, which was posted on his twitter account and on the
	embassy's website.
	
	"Ambassador Michael George DeSombre calls on the People’s Republic of
	China to save lives, not save face," said the U.S. embassy's headline.
	
	"When a vicious and dangerous conspiracy theory is uttered from an
	official government mouthpiece, however, we should take particular
	notice," Ambassador DeSombre wrote.
	
	"That is exactly what happened this month when a spokesman for the
	Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China leveled
	false accusations against the United States related to the COVID-19
	virus," DeSombre said.
	
	He did not describe China's anti-U.S. accusations.
	
	"Even worse, Chinese authorities actively censored and punished the
	brave Chinese people who tried to tell the truth.
	
	"Had these same authorities done the right thing and sounded the alarm
	about this new disease, China -- and indeed the rest of the world,
	including Thailand -- might have been spared the impact on our
	populations.
	
	"The Chinese people know their government is to blame for this
	pandemic," DeSombre said.
	
	China's embassy in Bangkok responded in a statement published in Thai
	media on March 25.
	
	"Michael George DeSombre, the U.S. Ambassador to Thailand,
	deliberately used the novel coronavirus epidemic to smear and attack
	China," wrote Chinese Embassy Counselor and Spokesman Yang Yang.
	
	"Interestingly, on January 25, President Trump tweeted that 'China has
	been working very hard to contain the coronavirus. The U.S. greatly
	appreciates China's efforts and transparency'," Yang said.
	
	"Who on earth is lying?" Yang asked.
	
	"The outbreak is growing rapidly in the U.S., and lies cannot save
	American people's lives.
	
	"The U.S. media revealed that several U.S. senators were informed of
	the real seriousness of the U.S. outbreak and secretly sold off their
	personal stocks as early as February," Yang said.
	
	"Who is not open, transparent and accountable?"
	
	Thailand stayed out of the diplomats' fight and remained silent,
	perhaps hoping the two embassies had said enough and would stop
	clashing.
	
	Bangkok tries to balance its relations with Washington and Beijing.
	China did not criticize Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha's 2014 coup,
	unlike the U.S. under then-President Obama.
	
	As a result of its balancing act, Thailand receives China's
	diplomatic, economic and military support while benefiting from
	massive U.S. military training exercises several times a year, plus
	other assistance. Thailand is a U.S. treaty ally.
	
	"The U.S. president is certainly pandering to his populist racism when
	he deceitfully uses the phrase 'Chinese virus'," wrote political
	commentator Felix Qui in an open letter to Yang Yang.
	
	"The virus originated in China, but that objective statement of fact
	is very different to Trump's racist language, which can only be
	harmful," Qui said.
	
	"However, China is not blameless.
	
	"Citing the prevention of 'public panic,' Chinese authorities used
	unjust Chinese law to harass the good doctor who had initially
	reported the virus in December last year, and who had tried to raise
	the alarm in a more timely manner that would have saved many lives in
	China and elsewhere.
	
	"The heroic Dr. Li Wenliang subsequently died of the disease about
	which he had patriotically tried to alert the Chinese people, despite
	the repressive efforts of the Chinese Communist Party," Qui wrote.
	
	Prime Minister Prayuth meanwhile declared a state of emergency which
	began on March 26 to deal with COVID-19, including a ban on arriving
	tourists and most other foreigners.
	
	Thailand's air, sea and land borders now block all foreigners except
	diplomats, people with work permits, and other specific cases.
	
	Under the Emergency Decree, security forces have legal immunity from
	prosecution for following their superiors' orders.
	
	Large gatherings are banned, anyone who hoards food, drinking water or
	medical supplies will be arrested, and venues which were recently
	ordered to shut down will remain closed.
	
	The government can also censor media, prohibit people from leaving
	their homes, evacuate areas, stop transportation, and enforce other
	controls.
	
	The Emergency Decree restores most of the authoritarian powers Prayuth
	wielded after he toppled an elected government in a 2014 coup, when he
	was army chief.
	
	After ruling for five years as head of a military junta, Prayuth won a
	2019 election. He continued as a civilian prime minister in the
	current military-backed coalition government.
	
	"We have to take measures to stop the spread of the virus and to
	lessen the damage to our economy," Prayuth said on March 24,
	announcing the emergency.
	
	"Some might say their rights will be curtailed, but please think of
	the bigger picture and those close to you."
	
	Prayuth's live televised announcement on March 24 was marred by his
	oversized, puffy, gray silk face mask -- patterned to match his
	elegant silk shirt -- which repeatedly slipped and exposed his nose
	while he spoke.
	
	Eventually he yanked off his face mask, simultaneously knocking his
	glasses vertical, which he then also removed before continuing his
	announcement.
	
	As of March 27 in Thailand, more than 1,000 people have been infected,
	four died, and some recovered from the virus, officials said.
	
	Bangkok's Lumpini Boxing Stadium, owned by the army, allegedly defied
	a recent government order to close, and allowed a fight on March 6
	witnessed by 50,000 fans, spawning at least 132 infections, Thai media
	reported on March 25.
	
	Army Chief General Apirat Kongsompong said an investigation would be launched.
	
	Apirat earlier appeared in an online video wearing hazardous material
	protection gear while walking in Bangkok and spraying public walls and
	other areas.
	
	The video was widely mocked by viewers who perceived it as a public
	relations stunt because it was set to music and singing, shown in
	slow-motion, and included several men in his team wearing normal
	civilian clothes.
	
	Officials recently clamped a "soft lockdown" on Bangkok and several
	other cities, closing schools, shopping malls, stadiums, indoor
	restaurant dining, and many other public and private venues.
	
	Food markets, pharmacies and other essential places remain open.
	
	Bangkok's usually bustling streets were thinly populated but normal on
	March 27. People commuted to and from work, shopped at smaller stores,
	and ordered take-out and delivery services to get restaurant meals.
	
	Panic buying barely dented the abundance of food on sale at most supermarkets.
	
	Thailand is a food exporting nation and, during normal times, also
	feeds millions of foreign tourists.
	
	With most of those tourists now gone, Thailand has more than enough
	food to withstand the havoc to society caused by the coronavirus and
	closures, officials said.
	
	Tens of thousands of worried Thais, Burmese, Cambodians and Lao
	however rushed to leave Bangkok a few days ago.
	
	Most had suddenly become unemployed when shops, hotels and other
	businesses shut down because of new restrictions.
	
	Their mass exodus prompted fears that they could spread the mostly
	Bangkok-based virus throughout Thailand and to neighboring Myanmar,
	Cambodia and Laos.