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A restaurant in Osaka, Japan has publicly banned Chinese customers.
The notice written in simplified sugar cites rude behavior as a reason.
This decision has created a debate on social media in both countries.
A restaurant in Osaka, Japan has come under investigation to ban Chinese customers by posting a notice at its door. The restaurant named Hayashin, famous for its grilled cuisine, posted a message, written in simplified sugar, stating that Chinese people were “rude” and did not “welcome” inside the installation.
Although it is unknown what the restaurant owners inspired to post notes, it raised a chat on social media on both Japanese and Chinese social media, according to a report in a report South China Morning Post. While some nationalist locals have supported the restaurant’s decision, Chinese social media users have expressed disappointment and anger over the discriminatory attitude.
A social media user said, “A restaurant that posts such a note is worse than rude customers,” another said, while another said, while another said: “It is cheaper to attract customers under the patriotic banner.”
Previous example
This is not the first example that the restaurant of either of the two nations has created controversy. In 2020, when the epidemic was still in its early stage, a restaurant in the Northeast China was killed by a large, red banner to convince that the United States and Japan Koronwirus.
Read the banner,
As the dispute was snowed, the restaurant manager was dismissed to hang the aggressive banner without permission.
The restaurant said in a statement, “We apologize for the negative social impact caused by our employee.”
Banner in restaurant #CCP Government #China Says: “Congratulations #pandemic In America! We want the epidemic in the dwarf Japan will last forever and forever! ,
What do you think? I call it anti -humanity. Do such people have the right to oppose “racism” again? #CCPVirus pic.twitter.com/n6dodzti88– Uncomfortable truth by Jennifer Zeng (@jenniferzeng97) March 23, 2020
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In 2023, a Chinese restaurant in Tokyo posted a note to ban the Chinese people as they wanted to stop the “China virus”. Another Tokyo restaurant posted on social media that it had banned Chinese and South Korean customers last July.
Historically, Japan does not share a pleasant relationship with China. Regional disputes and World War II complaints have killed Japan-China relations for decades.