The Daily Telegraph

Chinese agents ‘following and filming’ students at British universiti­es

- By Nicola Smith ASIA CORRESPOND­ENT

HONG KONG and Chinese students at British universiti­es are being secretly photograph­ed and filmed as part of a global pattern of harassment and intimidati­on by Beijing, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

In a new 63-page report released by the human rights group today, students describe being followed at protests in their host cities, with many revealing that their families back home have also been threatened by police in connection with their activism overseas.

Amnesty interviewe­d 32 Chinese students, including 12 from Hong Kong, studying at universiti­es in the UK, Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherland­s, Switzerlan­d, Canada and the US.

Virtually all said they self-censored their social interactio­ns and more than half their online activity, fearing retaliatio­n and surveillan­ce by the Chinese authoritie­s.

One student in the UK described noticing individual­s appearing to monitor several protests she attended, saying: “Every time, there is someone [we] don’t know filming. Standing to the side, using their phones and recording.”

She added that the age, appearance or demeanour of the individual­s stood out as unusual, leading her to believe they might have been affiliated to the Chinese government.

Another Chinese student who held up a sign in support of Hong Kong protesters was secretly photograph­ed at Edinburgh airport the next day and targeted with death threats on Chinese social media platform Weibo..

Amnesty reports that students’ families in China also face threats, including the revoking of passports or being fired from jobs if their children criticise the government while abroad.

Rowan, whose name and university have been kept anonymous, described how within hours of attending a commemorat­ion of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, she heard from her father in China who had been contacted by security officials. He was told to “educate his daughter who is studying overseas not to attend any events that may harm China’s reputation”.

Rowan was particular­ly alarmed that she had not shared her real name with anyone involved in the protest or posted about it online, but was still identified by the authoritie­s.

Sarah Brooks, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s China director, said: “The testimonie­s gathered in this report paint a chilling picture of how the Chinese and Hong Kong government­s seek to silence students even when they are thousands of miles from home, leaving many students living in fear.”

There are an estimated 900,000 Chinese students studying abroad. Ms Brooks said: “The impact of China’s transnatio­nal repression poses a serious threat to the free exchange of ideas that is at the heart of academic freedom.”

The Chinese embassy in the UK was contacted for comment.

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