The Phnom Penh Post

Hong Kong exchange students fear and rebel

- Katie Forster

MALAYSIAN stud e n t C e l i a C h e n g ’s f i r s t semester in Hong Kong began with being teargassed outside parliament and ended with her evacuation from campus as protesters hur l e d pet ro l bombs a t police.

The 20-year-old wants to continue her degree in a city rocked by six months of protests, despite her family’s reservatio­ns.

“If my parents don’t allow me to go back to Hong Kong, I might need to defer my studies,” Cheng, who won a scholarshi­p to one of the city’s top universiti­es, said from Malaysia.

Focal point for clashes

Hong Kong’s universiti­es – among the world’s most highly rated – have become a focal point of violent clashes between police and demonstrat­ors, and senior staff fear this could put off overseas students.

Last month, protesters at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) blocked a major highway and fired arrows at police in a tense stand-off.

An even more violent siege at Polytechni­c University lasted nearly two weeks with some protesters attempting daring escapes down through sewers.

Before term began, Cheng and another Malaysian student put on masks to join a rally at Hong Kong’s parliament, where young protesters stormed the building on July 1.

“I do support the cause, but at the same time, it was also curiosity,” she said, describing the night as “quite scary” – she saw computers and windows get smashed, then escaped through clouds of tear gas.

“The protesters were very welcoming. The Hong Kongers would ask me: ‘Do you really understand what we’re fighting for?’” she said. “If I didn’t understand, they’d explain.”

Cheng, who asked to use a pseudonym, didn’t tell her family in Malaysia about that night. She says they see the protests as “useless” and support China as a strong economic power.

After the campus clashes and once classes were cancelled for the rest of the term, she was bussed away from her dorm with her belongings.

Many exchange students were called back by their home countries and institutio­ns, while some students from mainland China at CUHK were evacuated in a police boat.

There are some 18,000 interropes and national students at Hong Kong’s eight government­funded universiti­es, representi­ng 18 per cent of total enrolment.

Of these, the majority – around 12,000 – are from mainland China, which rules the city under a “one country, two s y s t e ms” a g re e ment signed at Hong Kong’s 1997 handover from Britain.

Unresolved tension

One University of Hong Kong (HKU) graduate arts student from the mainland said she plans to return to campus next semester, but has “some concern about safety”.

This is because “fundamenta­l things like the tension between the protesters and government” have not been resolved, she said, asking not to use her name.

HKU was named the world’s most internatio­nal university earlier this year by Times Higher Education and is 35th in the British magazine’s overall global rankings.

“We recruit particular­ly our graduate students heavily from overseas, we are concerned about the impact of the protests generally on that,” said Matthew Evans, dean of HKU’s science faculty.

With examinatio­ns postponed and classes held online for the rest of term, HKU’s usually pristine hilltop campus is eerily deserted and covered in graffiti, with security guards checking student and staff IDs at each entrance.

Evans said discussion­s are being held on whether the campus needs to “beef up” security in the long term, “to recognise the changing environmen­t that we’re operating in”.

“We want to and will continue to protect freedom of speech, academic freedom, but we can’t do that in an environmen­t where there’s a risk of running battles.”

‘I think they’re scared’

Marie Funke, a 21-year-old politics student from Germany on a year-long exchange at CUHK, said she had seen other overseas students going to face off against police on the front line and was fearful.

Taiwan’s education ministry sa id last ter m t hat a ny st udent f leeing t he Hong Kong protests could reg ister wit h Ta i wa nese u n i ver sit ie s to continue t heir studies.

It’s an offer 20-year-old arts student Janice Lee from Hong Kong may take up, as her parents are making plans to emigrate to Taiwan if the situation deteriorat­es.

At a recent Q&A session for overseas HKU students, organised by a dozen local students involved in the protest movement, Lee said some of her internatio­nal classmates were also planning to go elsewhere.

“I think they are scared because the movement has lasted for so long and the protesters have turned very violent,” she said.

 ?? MOHD RASFAN/AFP ?? Malaysian student Celia Cheng’s first semester in Hong Kong began with being tear-gassed outside parliament and ended with her evacuation from campus as protesters hurled petrol bombs at police. The 20-year-old wants to continue her degree in a city rocked by six months of protests, despite her family’s reservatio­ns.
MOHD RASFAN/AFP Malaysian student Celia Cheng’s first semester in Hong Kong began with being tear-gassed outside parliament and ended with her evacuation from campus as protesters hurled petrol bombs at police. The 20-year-old wants to continue her degree in a city rocked by six months of protests, despite her family’s reservatio­ns.

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