Cornell drops exchanges with Chinese
school over academic freedom issues
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[October 30, 2018]
By Michael Martina
BEIJING (Reuters) - Cornell University has
cut two exchange programs with a top Chinese school over academic
freedom concerns, the Ivy League school said, after Chinese students
were punished for supporting labor rights in China.
The move is a rare step for a U.S. university, many of which are eager
to court ties with China due to its huge education market, amid
international criticism of tightening Chinese government controls on
scholarship.
Cornell's School of Industrial and Labour Relations (ILR) suspended the
small programs with its counterparts at Beijing-based Renmin University
after several Chinese student activists were punished for supporting
protests at a welding machinery firm in the southern Chinese city of
Huizhou.
"The decision stemmed from concerns that students at the Chinese
institution were being penalized for speaking out about labor rights,"
Provost Michael Kotlikoff said in a statement on Tuesday.
Kotlikoff said Cornell had a history of meaningful exchanges with China
and an "overarching commitment to academic freedom", adding that the
suspension did not affect other Cornell academic programs in China.
The suspension of the exchanges was first reported by the Financial
Times.
Labor activism is viewed as a challenge by the ruling Communist Party,
which opposes independent unions and punishes protesters.
Under President Xi Jinping, Beijing has stepped up censorship, tightened
controls on the internet and various aspects of civil society, and
reasserted party authority over academia and other institutions.
Chinese officials have also campaigned against the spread of "Western
values" at universities and the party's anti-corruption watchdog has
sent inspectors to monitor teachers for "improper" remarks in class.
"IT CROSSED TOO MANY LINES"
In August, police in riot gear stormed an apartment in Huizhou where
activists, including students from many top Chinese schools, were
staying while they supported factory workers at Jasic International
seeking to form a union.
Some of the students were detained and a document was leaked on social
media which revealed details of how Renmin University planned to keep
vocal students under surveillance on campus.
"We are a labor school. They are a labor school. This was an academic
freedom violation that was related directly to a labor issue," Eli
Friedman, the director of international programs at ILR who made the
decision with Cornell administrators, told Reuters.
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"It crossed too many lines, as far as I was concerned."
Friedman notified Renmin of the suspension in an email on Oct. 20,
according to an image he posted on Twitter on Monday.
In the email, he said he had seen evidence that the university was
"taking extreme measures", including widespread surveillance and
pressuring students' families, to prevent them from speaking out on
labor issues.
"On the other hand, I have seen no evidence of student wrongdoing,"
he wrote.
Renmin did not respond to a request for comment.
But China's nationalist Global Times tabloid said in a commentary
late on Monday that Cornell's accusations were "nonsense" and
"misled by online rumors".
"The road for China will inevitably get wider and wider, while the
path for the few forces who reject cooperation with us will only get
more and more narrow," it said.
The school exchanges, which began in 2014, typically included about
10 U.S. undergraduate students studying at Renmin in the summer,
followed by a handful of Chinese students studying at Cornell for
the longer fall semester.
Several Chinese students are still at Cornell, and the U.S.
university has pledged to support them as they finish their studies
as planned.
Friedman said he would like the exchanges to resume when there is
evidence that academic freedom has improved.
(Reporting by Michael Martina and Sue-Lin Wong; Editing by Nick
Macfie)
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