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China students protest as university charter cuts 'freedom of thought'
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Dec 19, 2019

China state TV axes interview with UK ambassador
Beijing (AFP) Dec 18, 2019 - The British embassy voiced disappointment on Wednesday after the English-language branch of Chinese state television decided not to air an interview with the ambassador that included a discussion on Hong Kong.

Beijing has repeatedly warned Britain to keep off its internal affairs as London has voiced concerns over increasingly violent pro-democracy protests in the former British colony.

Ashley Rodgers, head of communications at the embassy, told AFP that Ambassador Barbara Woodward was asked about Hong Kong during an interview in October with Liu Xin, a well-known anchor at China Global Television Network (CGTN).

"They had a good discussion and it's a shame that it won't be broadcast," Rodgers said, declining to give more details about what the ambassador said.

On Twitter, Rodgers said: "Disappointed that CGTN has decided not to broadcast Liu Xin's interview with HMA (Her Majesty's Ambassador) for 'technical reasons'.

"It was an engaging discussion on relations & viewers would have enjoyed it. This unfortunately highlights the challenges we face working with a tightly controlled media," Rodgers wrote.

Neither Liu nor a member of her team were immediately available for comment.

CGTN is an arm of Chinese state TV giant CCTV and a soft power tool for Beijing.

Under the terms of the 1997 handover deal from British to Chinese rule, Hong Kong enjoys rights and liberties unseen on the mainland, including freedom of expression.

Prior to taking office as prime minister, Britain's Boris Johnson said in July that he backed Hong Kong protesters "every inch of the way".

In November his government said it was "seriously concerned" over the violence and an escalation between protests and police.

Separately, CGTN is facing a probe by Britain's broadcasting watchdog following a complaint filed by a former employee of the British consulate in Hong Kong, Simon Cheng.

A human rights group, Safeguard Defenders, said last month that state-run CGTN, which holds a licence to broadcast in Britain, had aired an item including "direct lies, violations of his privacy and unproven allegations reported as facts".

Cheng, a Hong Kong citizen, has alleged that Chinese police tortured and interrogated him about London's role in the protests.

Police later released a video purporting to show him confessing to soliciting prostitutes, which Cheng said in his complaint to the regulator was shown on CGTN.

Cheng said he felt he had no choice but to confess to the charge, which he said was offered by police as an alternative to "indefinite criminal detention".

One of China's top universities has removed references to "freedom of thought" from its official charter, triggering a rare act of student defiance, while two other institutions have moved to strengthen their allegiance to President Xi Jinping.

A video that circulated this week showed students at Shanghai's Fudan University gathering to sing the school song -- which extols "academic independence and freedom of thought" -- in an apparent protest against the move.

Fudan's charter change was announced by the Ministry of Education on its website late Tuesday and quickly became a hot topic on social media, with posts questioning the move before China's ever-vigilant online censors acted to delete posts and block discussion.

As well as removing the "freedom of thought" reference, the new version inserts "arming the minds of teachers and students with Xi Jinping's new era of socialist ideology with Chinese characteristics".

It also obliges the school's faculty and teachers to adhere to "core socialist values" and for the institution to build a campus environment that is "harmonious" -- a word typically used as code for the elimination of any anti-government sentiment.

The ministry announced similar changes to the charters of Nanjing University in eastern China, and Shaanxi Normal University in the north earlier this month, although neither institution referenced freedom of thought in their originals.

Xi took office in 2012 and has implemented a campaign to increase the ruling Communist Party's grip on the country and build a personality cult around himself which includes reverential references to a vaguely defined "Xi Jinping Thought" that recalls the days of Communist founder Mao Zedong.

Xi's government has moved aggressively to throttle activists and other critics while pushing Communist ideological dogma through all aspects of society, from politics to culture and entertainment.

He also called in a speech last year for Marxism to be promoted in campuses and classrooms.

But even Marxist students have faced a backlash, as police cracked down on some who supported a labour rights movement last year.

The risks of defying Xi have prevented any major public pushback.

But Fudan, one of China's most selective institutions of higher learning, is also among its most liberal, with a student body proud of a reputation for relative academic freedom.

In the brief clip of the student demonstration, around two dozen people are seen singing the school song in a campus canteen as a security guard appears to be lightly admonishing them.

A Fudan student told AFP that the gathering took place at lunchtime on Wednesday.

The charter revisions come as Beijing rails against anti-government protests in Hong Kong in which universities have emerged as focal points.

China's government already keeps a close eye on university campuses, which incubated some of the country's most momentous 20th-century political movements.

In 1989, thousands of university students joined workers in pro-democracy protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, provoking a bloody crackdown that remains a taboo subject.


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