China Daily

Scientist objects to ‘targeting’ by agencies using FBI

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

A prominent Chinese neuroscien­tist has written a letter to the US National Institutes of Health to express indignatio­n over the institute’s public warnings about foreign influence over NIH-funded biomedical research.

Rao Yi, dean of the division of sciences at Peking University, wrote a letter to NIH Director Francis Collins to accuse the body of “clearly targeting China” and casting aspersions on Chinese researcher­s in the United States.

Involving the FBI could interfere with scientific exchanges, and scientists could be tainted by false accusation­s, Rao said in the letter, which was published on Wednesday on a WeChat account founded by Rao and two other scholars.

Rao’s letter came after Collins wrote to roughly 10,000 NIH grant institutio­ns in August encouragin­g them to set up briefings with FBI field offices about threats to intellectu­al property and foreign interferen­ce, according to Scientific American.

The NIH is investigat­ing half a dozen research institutio­ns based on suspicions that researcher­s with federal grants failed to disclose significan­t financial contributi­ons from foreign government­s, Collins said. “We are concerned about circumstan­ces where people have intentiona­lly been deceptive about those connection­s, with an intention to divert intellectu­al property or perhaps use their access to peer-review materials to ship them overseas,” he said.

Rao said Collins’ Aug 20 statement is a “deviation from the normal practice of science”.

“Science is eternal, whereas politics, such as the kind practiced in the present-day US, is transient,” Rao said.

With Trumpism prevalent in the US, it is a testing time for many, including scientists, he said: “It is time for American scientists to show their spines.”

“If allowed to go down this slippery road, how do we know that competing labs will not report on each other for foreign interferen­ce or influence when a large number of students and a significan­t number of faculty members are foreign-born? Should future discussion­s of science be separated into American and Foreign?”

The NIH should discard shortsight­ed collaborat­ions with the FBI or fearmonger­ing about “foreign interferen­ce” and instead embrace efforts by all countries to support biomedical research, Rao said.

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