Can Mekong river stingrays tell China’s dam narrative well?

A fabricated article was used to refute allegations about the negative environmental impact of Chinese dam building.

Can a giant stingray in the Lower Mekong be used to craft a good narrative about Chinese upstream dams? It can, according to a Khmer Times article about a 300kg stingray found in Cambodia’s Stung Treng province.

The June 27 article quoted Zeb Hogan, an American biologist, as saying that “stingrays do not like to live in polluted waters”, and this “shows that China’s dam construction doesn’t affect the Lower Mekong’s ecosystem”. Hogan is also director of the Wonders of the Mekong project funded by the US Agency for International Development.

Republished on the website of the China-administered Lancang-Mekong Water Resources Cooperation Information Sharing Platform (LMC-ISP), this could have been an example of the “wonderful stories” the Chinese hope to tell to refute what they see as unfounded and US-instigated allegations about the negative environmental impact of dam building in the upstream Lancang (the Chinese name for the Mekong).

In full: https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/opinion/article/3195141/can-mekong-river-stingrays-tell-chinas-dam-narrative-well

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