https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-55168883
From furious insults to WeChat censorship, a spat between China and Australia over a controversial tweet has escalated into an online tit-for-tat in recent days.
The catalyst for the row, posted by a top Chinese government official, was a fake image.
But the diplomatic fall-out has been all too real, plunging an already fragile relationship between the two countries further into the abyss.
Warning: This story contains an image some people might find distressing.
Australia demands China apology for 'repugnant' post
China defends gruesome Australia tweet
The year when Australia and China hit 'lowest ebb'
'Truly repugnant'
It all began with that shocking tweet.
On Monday China's foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian posted this fake image on Twitter, responding to a damning report about alleged Australian war crimes in Afghanistan.
In a fake image, an Australian solider is seen murdering a child who is holding a lamb
IMAGE COPYRIGHTTWITTER
We've blurred out a part of it, but the picture shows a grinning Australian soldier holding a bloodied knife to the throat of an Afghan child.
"Shocked by murder of Afghan civilians & prisoners by Australian soldiers. We strongly condemn such acts, and call for holding them accountable," he wrote.
Less than two hours later, a furious Scott Morrison, Australia's prime minister, was on national television demanding an apology from Beijing. Deploying his most undiplomatic language to date, he called it "truly repugnant, deeply offensive, utterly outrageous".
He added that Australia had established a transparent process to investigate the alleged war crimes, as was expected of a "democratic, liberal" country.
What is China up to?
From furious insults to WeChat censorship, a spat between China and Australia over a controversial tweet has escalated into an online tit-for-tat in recent days.
The catalyst for the row, posted by a top Chinese government official, was a fake image.
But the diplomatic fall-out has been all too real, plunging an already fragile relationship between the two countries further into the abyss.
Warning: This story contains an image some people might find distressing.
Australia demands China apology for 'repugnant' post
China defends gruesome Australia tweet
The year when Australia and China hit 'lowest ebb'
'Truly repugnant'
It all began with that shocking tweet.
On Monday China's foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian posted this fake image on Twitter, responding to a damning report about alleged Australian war crimes in Afghanistan.
In a fake image, an Australian solider is seen murdering a child who is holding a lamb
IMAGE COPYRIGHTTWITTER
We've blurred out a part of it, but the picture shows a grinning Australian soldier holding a bloodied knife to the throat of an Afghan child.
"Shocked by murder of Afghan civilians & prisoners by Australian soldiers. We strongly condemn such acts, and call for holding them accountable," he wrote.
Less than two hours later, a furious Scott Morrison, Australia's prime minister, was on national television demanding an apology from Beijing. Deploying his most undiplomatic language to date, he called it "truly repugnant, deeply offensive, utterly outrageous".
He added that Australia had established a transparent process to investigate the alleged war crimes, as was expected of a "democratic, liberal" country.
What is China up to?
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