The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Students protest in Hong Kong over compulsory Mandarin

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HONG KONG: Hundreds of Hong Kong students protested Friday as tensions escalate on campuses over compulsory testing of Mandarin – the dominant language of mainland China.

The first language of Hong Kong is Cantonese and proposals from education chiefs to put more emphasis on learning Mandarin have tapped into fears about the “mainlandis­ation” of the semiautono­mous city’s culture and identity.

Anger has mounted since two students from Baptist University were suspended this week for confrontin­g and swearing at staff over the requiremen­t to pass an exam in Mandarin before being able to graduate.

Their suspension comes as concern grows that academic freedoms are being squeezed by Beijing, and that freedom of speech as a whole is under threat.

Protesters from a range of universiti­es gathered Friday afternoon in a public square at Baptist to support suspended pair Andrew Chan and Lau Tszkei, chanting: “Shame on student suppressio­n!”

“Never mind if we have been suspended, but what if it happens to you all?” an emotional Chan told the crowd, wiping away tears.

Lau, who is president of the Baptist student union, admitted they need to reflect on their actions towards staff but said he was ‘very disappoint­ed’ in the university chief’s decision to suspend them.

“I never thought he would do this,” Lau said.

Lau and Chan were among 30 students who confronted staff in an eight-hour stand-off at the university’s language centre last Friday after it was revealed that 70 per cent of those who had taken a Mandarin proficienc­y test had failed.

The test was introduced last year for students seeking exemption from a compulsory course in the language.

Students have highlighte­d the complexity of the proficienc­y test questions, and say the marking system was not transparen­t.

Supporters of compulsory testing say Mandarin skills boost students’ career prospects, but many feel they should have the right to choose their own subjects.

Hong Kong enjoys freedoms unseen on the mainland since being handed back to China by Britain in 1997, under a ‘one country, two systems’ deal. But there are rising concerns that those liberties are under threat.

Universiti­es have increasing­ly become battlegrou­nds after the mass Umbrella Movement protests of 2014 demanding democratic reforms.

The rallies, which failed to win concession­s, were spearheade­d by university student leaders and were an unpreceden­ted rebuke to Beijing. — AFP

 ??  ?? Lau and Chan joins a protest march by students inside the university in Hong Kong — Reuters photo
Lau and Chan joins a protest march by students inside the university in Hong Kong — Reuters photo

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