China’s online ultranationalists feel the heat over Japanese school bus attack comments
- Chinese social media has seen a wave of extreme nationalism directed at Japan in recent years amid rising bilateral tensions

Hu Youping, 54, was stabbed multiple times while trying to restrain an attacker at a school bus stop in China’s eastern city of Suzhou on Monday. She died in hospital two days later.
The attacker first targeted a Japanese mother and her child waiting at the stop and then tried to get on the bus, which was carrying Japanese schoolchildren. Hu immediately rushed to help and her courageous act “prevented more people from being hurt”, Suzhou police said.

Hu’s bravery was hailed by most of the public. The Japanese embassy in Beijing lowered its flag to half-mast on Friday morning in honour of Hu, and posted condolence messages on social media sites X and Weibo.
But other online posts still sought to defame Hu and stir up anti-Japanese sentiment.
Tech giant NetEase, which runs online gaming, social media and email services, said that some users had recently been exaggerating or even fabricating the truth, posting “inappropriate comments to incite nationalist sentiment”.
