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I'm late

来自China Digital Space

Anne讨论 | 贡献2014年9月9日 (二) 16:34的版本
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我来晚了 (wǒ lái wǎn le): I’m late

Wen Jiabao consoling the child of a victim of the Tongchuan mine blast, November 2004. (Lan Hongguang/Xinhua)

A catchphrase of former Prime Minister Wen Jiabao. He first apology for a late arrival came on a trip to Tongchuan, Shaanxi Province after a gas explosion in a coal mine there in 2004 killed 166 people. From then on, netizens noted Wen’s every apology for being late at the scenes of natural and man-made disasters: a southern snow storm in January 2008, the devastating Sichuan earthquake of May 8, 2008, and the site of the Wenzhou train crash stand out in the public memory. Instead of praise for “Grandpa Wen,” netizens often think Wen is feeding the people and the media a clever line. They believe he lacks real concern for the plight of the Chinese people.

”I’m late” also recalls former premier Zhao Ziyang’s final appearance in public, when he spoke to student protesters in Tiananmen Square on May 19, 1989. “Students, we have come too late” (同学们,我们来得太晚了) he began, in a speech encouraging students to end their hunger strike. Wen Jiabao accompanied Zhao.

See also movie star.

“Grandpa Wen” famously spoke to Sichuan earthquake victims on the ground. Some saw his hands-on approach as a brilliant publicity stunt. (artist unknown)

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