Monday, July 28, 2014

Concerns Grow Over China's Confucius Institutes

 china-confucius-institute-hq-may-2010.jpg
Once lauded as the jewel in the crown of China's "soft power" cultural diplomacy, Confucius Institutes have sprung up at hundreds of colleges and teaching institutions around the world.Partnering with local academic centers, their aim is to teach people to speak Chinese, as well as broadening people's experience of Chinese culture in general.But a recent warning from a group of U.S. professors suggests some 90 Confucius Institutes across the U.S. may also be seeking to instill in students the ruling Chinese Communist Party's views.

"Confucius Institutes function as an arm of the Chinese state," the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) wrote in a report issued in June."Most agreements establishing Confucius Institutes feature nondisclosure clauses and unacceptable concessions to the political aims and practices of the government of China," it said.It said such political agendas are typically allowed to flourish in U.S. colleges and universities, even when curriculum choices and academic debate are restricted as a result.Confucius Institutes may appear at first glance to resemble the British Council, the Goethe Institut or the Alliance FranĪ‚aise, but their potential threat to academic freedom lies specifically in the fact that they base themselves out of universities, the AAUP said.

While their European counterparts are clearly aligned with "soft power" objectives and national agendas, they aren't permitted to influence academic freedom in the countries where they operate, it said."Allowing any third-party control of academic matters is inconsistent with principles of academic freedom, shared governance, and the institutional autonomy of colleges and universities," the group said.It called on U.S. universities to break ties with Confucius Institutes unless they can renegotiate agreements to win back unilateral control of their curricula, staff hiring policies and choice of texts.

China's state media has hit back at the report in defense of some 327 Confucius Institutes that currently operate in 93 countries and regions around the world."Such claims expose not so much communist propaganda as their own intolerance of exotic cultures and biased preconceived notions to smear and isolate the [Communist Party]," the official Xinhua news agency wrote in a June editorial."Those seeking to stem Confucius Institutes as disseminators of world culture are trying to hold back a pure form of human communication," it said.

'Machinery of a dictatorship'

U.S.-based rights activist and political commentator Harry Wu agreed with the AAUP, however."This is a state-backed organization, and as such is part of the machinery of a dictatorship," Wu told RFA in a recent interview.He said staff employed to teach Chinese overseas are given an official training program before they leave the country."[For example, on issues like] on the question of Tibet, on overseas pro-democracy movements and on the question of Uyghurs in Xinjiang," Wu said. "It also covers the question of religious freedom."Meanwhile, U.K.-based scholar Wu Kegang said communication between hosting institutions and the Confucius Institutes is insufficient.

"Even if institutions did want to make them part of their own system, how are they going to communicate?""If they aren't familiar with the way they're run, it will be very difficult," Wu said.Peter Kwong, professor at Hunter College and the City University of New York, said the main aim of re-evaluating Confucius Institutes would be to give hosting institutions more of a say in their running."[The question is], do we have any real power in the running of these institutes that are here [on our campuses]?" Kwong said."Perhaps it would be in our interest to get involved in some of their decision-making?"

'Fake history'

Zhu Yongde, honorary professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology, said attempts have been made to influence the hiring of teachers at the institutes in the direction of academic freedom.But he appeared to suggest they had yet to result in any meaningful change."There are a lot of issues around the time of language used to express ideas, and some examples of incorrect modes of expression," Zhu said.U.S.-based activist and former China national basketball player Chen Kai said he found it hard to believe that the Confucius Institutes had been given so much power in the first place.

"How can an academically free campus permit educational materials to be supplied by a dictatorship?" Chen said."They're not allowed to talk about the Cultural Revolution [1966-1976], they're not allowed to discuss the [1989] Tiananmen Square massacre, nor the [banned] Falun Gong [spiritual movement], nor the anti-rightist campaigns [of the 1950s]," he said."The history they teach is history turned on its head," Chen said."Surely bringing their fake history to American campuses, to American high schools counts as brainwashing?"

A ninth candidate is eyed

 Cambodia National Rescue Party president Sam Rainsy addresses supporters at a party congress in Wat Botum Park
A candidate to fill the crucial ninth position of a reformed National Election Committee will likely be announced today, roughly 24 hours after an opposition party congress involving members from across the country took place in Phnom Penh.Opposition sources refrained from revealing the name of the candidate who is the subject of ongoing discussions between the Cambodia National Rescue Party and the ruling Cambodian People’s Party.But CNRP president Sam Rainsy said it was likely that the candidate, who will hold the balance of power in the bipartisan election body, will be announced following a meeting between the negotiating teams today.“I think the ninth member will be made public [today],” he said, adding that it was not certain that a final decision would be made at the meeting. Party spokesman Yim Sovann dismissed suggestions that choosing the ninth member would lead to a stalemate in which both sides proposed partisan candidates.“I am very sure that an agreement will be reached,” he said. “There may be some indication after the meeting.”

Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan declined to comment on the proposals for a ninth NEC member, while Prum Sokha, secretary of state at the Interior Ministry, and National Assembly spokesman Chheang Vun, could not be reached yesterday.Speaking to thousands of supporters in the capital’s Wat Botum Park yesterday morning, CNRP vice president Kem Sokha said that while Prime Minister Hun Sen had indicated a willingness to come to an agreement over the ninth member, the CNRP wouldn’t take its seats in parliament until a final decision had been made.“If we cannot find the ninth individual for the NEC by agreement together, the CNRP lawmakers-elect will not take their seats in parliament,” he said.Hun Sen, Sokha added, had suggested during negotiations last Tuesday that the two parties were more than capable of finding consensus.As today’s anniversary of the disputed July 2013 national election approached, the opposition on Tuesday agreed to end its 10-month-long parliamentary boycott and “work together” with the ruling CPP.

Sokha added that coming to an accord with the CPP would herald a new phase of pressure on the authorities.“From now on, the Cambodian People’s Party cannot do whatever it wishes,” he said.
The opposition used yesterday’s congress to gain approval for a seven-point platform, including policy priorities it will pursue once its elected members become lawmakers. Some of these policies resembled the CNRP’s pre-election promises, which included higher salaries for civil servants and the armed forces, state pensions for the elderly and free medical care for the poor.
Government spokesman Siphan, however, said the congress was more of a public relations stunt than an exercise in democratic freedom.

Wearing hats with the Cambodia National Rescue Party logo, supporters of the opposition listen to speeches at a party congress yesterday at Wat Botum Park. Pha Lina
“It is part of their campaign for popularity,” he said. “The government has already been working on a number of reforms, and the CNRP now has to work through parliament to achieve what it wants. We work through the system – we don’t try to be popular.”
The expected arrival of the CNRP in the National Assembly prompted some reshuffling of leadership positions within the CPP yesterday. 

Senior CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap said that the assembly’s current deputy president, Nguon Nhel, who as part of the deal will relinquish that position to the CNRP, will become second deputy president. The current second deputy and the heads of the four commissions offered to the CNRP will be bumped back down to regular members of parliament. Minister of Information and sometimes-CPP spokesman Khieu Kanharith confirmed the moves yesterday.
At the congress yesterday, the opposition leaders pledged to supporters they would seek justice for the victims of land disputes and take strong measures to weed out graft at the helm of a planned anti-corruption commission in parliament.

Rainsy said the practicalities of establishing the commission were yet to be decided.
“We cannot say how it will operate yet … We have the CPP-aligned Anti-Corruption Unit, but it’s far from effective. We will take the initiative to investigate all ministries, all departments. I have put a lot of hope in this project.”The party leader will attend an extraordinary session of parliament today to be officially confirmed as an opposition lawmaker, replacing Kuoy Bunroeun, who was elected to a seat in Kampong Cham province and is one of four members chosen by the CNRP to sit on the reformed NEC.The congress also proved an opportunity for party members to express their mixed feelings about joining a parliament dominated by the CPP following more than 10 months of protest since an election the opposition believes was rigged.

Kem Vuthy, 53, an activist from Siem Reap city, said he did not know “if this decision will be good or not in the long term”.“We will need to wait and see, but I hope the leaders stay strong and stick to their principles. I don’t know if there are deep divisions in the party. Now more than ever we should be united.”Other activists said they were not satisfied.“We need to wait and see the result. I am disappointed about some things [in the agreement],” said Eang Vannath, 31, from Battambang city.
Kuch Vandy, 24, a CNRP activist from Phnom Penh, said the party should have held out for a better deal.“I think they gave too much away. We should have waited longer and gone back to the street if we must. Now we will have to wait for years before the government changes. A lot can happen before that.”

Rights monitor tapped for 'neutral' NEC seat

 Pung Chiv Kek
Licadho president Pung Chhiv Kek has been selected as the ninth member of the reformed National Election Committee following a cross-party meeting this morning, a government official and sources in the rights group she heads have said.Kek, who has yet to officially accept the role on the election body, could not be immediately reached, but senior Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker Cheam Yeap confirmed that she had been approached for the job.

“This morning, [Prime Minister] Hun Sen met with [Cambodia National Rescue Party president] Sam Rainsy to agree on the ninth member,” he said. “They choose Pung Chhiv Kek.”
Am Sam Ath, a senior investigator for Licadho, said Kek had yet to receive an official letter offering her the position.“I cannot say on her behalf, because it is her decision. But the official letter will be coming this afternoon or tomorrow,” he said.Another Licadho staff member, who declined to be named, said that the long-time human rights advocate would make an announcement tomorrow following a “long internal meeting” today.

“She has not made a decision yet. But she will say something tomorrow about this,” the staff member said.The Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights, known as Licadho, was founded by Kek in 1992 after she helped broker the Paris Peace Accords between Hun Sen and King Norodom Sihanouk, ending the civil war of the 1980s.Opposition CNRP president Sam Rainsy, however, said he could not reveal a name but that a candidate had been selected.
“I am waiting for an official acceptance from the person concerned. If the person accepts, it could be as soon as one hour. But until that time I would not like to comment on the name.”

Experts call for legal action against China

 
Viet Nam should prepare to take its case against China to the international court of justice, even though it has moved its Haiyang Shiyou 981 oil rig out of the country's exclusive economic zone and continental shelf, the two-day conference held in HCM City heard on Saturday.
Pierre Schifferli, deputy judge of the Court of Appeals in Geneva, said: "China has already moved its oil rig out of Viet Nam. But it's not the end of the story.""All the documents of the past presented in front of the Reunification Palace today show it is clear that the right of Viet Nam on Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) Archipelago are recognised around the world. It is obvious from the history and legal viewpoints," he said.

"Viet Nam should bring the case to the international court of justice even though China could refuse the jurisdiction in the case," he added.He said Viet Nam should also try to create a strong group within ASEAN to try to settle the dispute by peaceful measures.Mai Hong Quy, rector of the HCM City University of Law, said although the oil rig Haiyang Shiyou 981 was moved out of Viet Nam waters on July 15, this action caused bad precedence in international legal relations.
The conference, with the participation of some 50 legal scholars, was a chance for Viet Nam to hear from experts in international law about the possible legal solutions to settle disputes in the East Sea peacefully.

Jeanne Mirer, president of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers, said the conference was unprecedented as it was the first time such a large number of legal experts were assembled to speak about the East Sea issue.She said it was important to ensure that the dispute did not escalate into a much broader military confrontation.She said that international law provides that every country "shall have a 200 nautical miles of exclusive economic zone from its coastal line".
"The oil rig Haiyang Shiyou 981 was placed within the Exclusive Economic and Continental Shelf of Viet Nam and that is the major reason why it was a violation of the international law."
"China has many excuses for what it did, but those excuses really do not support international law," she added.

Chito Sta. Romana, president of the Philippines Association for Chinese Studies, told Viet Nam News on the sidelines of the conference that Viet Nam should learn from the experience of the Philippines in filing a lawsuit to China over the dispute on East Sea.The event, which was organised by HCM City Law University and Viet Nam Bar Association, included three sessions on major topics, including international law and China's oil rig placement in the East Sea, settlement of disputes by political and diplomatic measures under international law, and settlement of disputes by legal measures in accordance with international law.

It was attended by international law experts from research centres, institutes and universities from the US, Russia, Italy, Switzerland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Poland, Thailand, South Korea, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Japan and Singapore.The East Sea is the world's second busiest sea lane through which more than half of the world's supertankers and $5.3 trillion worth of annual trade passes.
There are ongoing sovereignty disputes in the sea between China and several of its neighbouring nations, including Viet Nam and the Philippines.

Fighting rages in Ukraine town; 2 children among 13 dead

 Fighting rages in eastern Ukraine town
More death and violence were reported in eastern Ukraine on Sunday, as some investigators stood ready but were unable to go to the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, downed more than a week ago.At least 13 people, including two children, were killed in fighting on Sunday between pro-Russian rebels and Ukraine government forces in and near the Ukrainian city of Horlivka, according to the Donetsk Regional Authority, citing preliminary information from the local health care department.Ukraine separatists are using Grad rockets on residential areas of Horlivka, according to Ukraine's Counter-Terrorist Operations Press Center in a statement.

Ukraine's military does not use artillery fire inside city centers to avoid civilian casualties, the statement said. Horlivka is surrounded by government forces.Pro-Russian militant commander OE Khasanov responded to CNN's Nick Paton Walsh's questions about the attacks in Horlivka by saying that the separatists are defending the city.At least 332 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed and nearly 1,300 have been injured since April 7, according to Ukraine's National Defense and Security Council and law enforcement agencies.There is no known figure for the number of separatists killed. 

Crash site remains 'still under control of terrorists'
Sunday's bloodshed comes more than a week after the Malaysia Airlines Flight went down July 17 in eastern Ukraine. All 298 on board were killed.Though some investigators from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe have been at the scene, Malaysian investigators haven't been able to access the entire crash site, officials said Sunday. 

Malaysia has struck an agreement with pro-Russian separatists in the area to allow international police to protect investigators, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Sunday, through a statement from his office. But he said he is "deeply concerned" those investigators still are not on scene due to the "volatile security situation."He implored that "the human remains are removed from the site, identified and repatriated."Everyone who was on board MH17 must be afforded proper dignity and respect," he said. Forty-three of the people on MH17 were Malaysian, including two infants and 15 crew members.

The crash site remained Sunday "still under control of terrorists," Andriy Lysenko, the spokesman for Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council told reporters.The OSCE deputy mission head, Alexander Hug, told reporters that the team stopped on the road to the crash site because they heard and saw the impact of artillery. He said it was unclear who was firing.The OSCE has been in contact with the separatists and the government to take another try at reaching the site Monday, he said. 

Hug said rebels have offered a train to transport bodies that the investigators find at the scene.
Dutch investigators -- among them a team of 30 forensic experts -- are remaining for the moment in the city of Donetsk, which is about 75 kilometers (50 miles) from Hrabove. Some 40 Dutch police officers are also positioned in Donetsk for now.About two-thirds of the people who died in the plane crash, 193 of the 298, were from the Netherlands.