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| Wednesday, 18 April, 2001, 11:41 GMT 12:41 UK Pilot remembered in cyberspace Wang Wei: "Protector of the Sea and Sky" Tributes to the missing Chinese pilot Wang Wei, who disappeared after his plane was involved in a mid-air collision with an American spy plane, are flooding to an online memorial. The virtual memorial has attracted more than 57,000 visitors to its Chinese site and 14,000 to its English-language page.
To many Chinese the pilot has become a potent symbol of what they see as China's defiant stand against an aggressive, intrusive western superpower. The United States has blamed the 1 April mid-air collision on Wang, saying he had reckless flying habits and flew too close to the US aircraft. The incident sparked a diplomatic crisis for Beijing and Washington after China refused to release the 24-member US crew and its marooned aircraft. China released the crew on 12 April when Washington said it was "very sorry" for the loss of Wang and for making an emergency landing in China without verbal permission. Digital tributes Visitors to the cyber-memorial can light a flickering candle or select a floral tribute - digital of course - from a list including lilies, carnations, chrysanthemums and even something called a flamingo flower.
Site operators Netor.com even have an online memorial to Princess Diana, but it has attracted barely 300 tributes. Many of the messages praise Wang. One mourner wrote: "You are the pride of the Chinese nation." Another mourner, signing himself "Daniel", said: "As an American I apologise and am deeply ashamed of our spying tactics all over the world. Wang Wei would still be with us if America was not so paranoid". But others have used the site to criticise China, attacking its US policy and urging Beijing to get out of Tibet. One floral tribute is labelled: "A big sunflower for a twit who brought about his own death". On the Chinese site, Wang has the third highest number of hits. First place belongs to Lu Youqing, the Shanghai writer whose online diary of his final months suffering from cancer became a literary sensation. |
See also: 04 Apr 00 | Asia-Pacific 11 Dec 00 | Asia-Pacific Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Asia-Pacific stories now: Links to more Asia-Pacific stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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