Los Angeles Times

Student faces Beijing’s ire

Threats, discipline against young Australian activist highlight China’s deep influence over a key U. S. ally

- By Shashank Bengali and Maria Petrakis

MELBOURNE, Australia — Before the text messages threatenin­g to kill his family arrived, Drew Pavlou gathered a small group of students on a busy walkway at the University of Queensland to protest the Chinese government’s repression of

Uighur Muslims and crackdown on Hong Kong.

“Hey- hey, ho- ho — Xi Jinping has got to go!”

As he denounced the Communist leader, hundreds of counter- demonstrat­ors massed around a colonnade at the campus in Brisbane, Australia. Some were students from China; others appeared older. They yelled pro- Beijing slogans and played the Chinese national anthem over loudspeake­rs.

Pavlou, 20, stopped for a moment and smiled, relishing the first protest he’d ever organized.

Things quickly turned violent. A man in the crowd rushed at Pavlou, snatching his megaphone. A second man shoved him. In the en

suing scuff les, one student from Hong Kong was tackled and grabbed by the throat; another had her shirt ripped open.

The next day, Chinese state media named Pavlou as a leader of the protest. Xu Jie, Beijing ’s consul general in Brisbane, praised the “spontaneou­s patriotic behavior” of those who had attacked the student.

It was an unusual statement for a diplomat, especially considerin­g Xu’s other position: adjunct professor at the university’s School of Languages and Cultures. His dual roles were an example of the increasing­ly close ties between Australian universiti­es and China, their biggest source of internatio­nal students.

The university didn’t chastise Xu for promoting violence. Instead, it defended its relationsh­ip with Beijing — and turned on one of its brightest students.

Pavlou’s July 2019 protest, and its turbulent aftermath, revealed how China’s economic power had translated into inf luence in Australia, affecting even what was said and taught at leading research universiti­es.

In an era of dueling superpower­s, Australia’s position is particular­ly vexed: closely allied to the U. S. but economical­ly reliant on China, which buys more than a third of its exports, including vast quantities of iron ore and coal. In recent years China has also underwritt­en a boom at Australian universiti­es, transformi­ng internatio­nal education into a $ 30- billion industry.

Chinese students’ tuition fees account for one- f ifth of the revenue of some top schools, according to a 2019 study by sociologis­t Salvatore Babones.

At the University of Queensland, a leafy campus of sandstone buildings in Australia’s third- largest city, 1 in 7 students, and some $ 200 million a year in fees, come from China. Administra­tors touted the research benefits and basked in growing global prestige.

But in 2017, during Pavlou’s freshman year, incidents involving Chinese students at several universiti­es showed how Australian commitment­s to free speech and liberal democratic principles clashed with Beijing’s desire for total control and its disdain for dissent.

One lecturer was forced to apologize for using teaching materials that listed Taiwan, which China considers part of its territory, as a country. Another was sus

pended after students objected to a test quoting a Chinese aphorism that government officials tell the truth only when “they are drunk or careless.”

Outrage over such cases appeared to be orchestrat­ed or supported by Chinese diplomats. Campus groups known as Chinese Students and Scholars Assns. — overseen by the Communist Party and often funded by Chinese embassies and consulates — monitor Chinese

students’ activities and mobilize them for nationalis­t causes, according to human rights groups.

“Universiti­es keep saying they defend free speech and they believe in academic freedom, but in practice they’re not working to defend the institutio­ns, students or staff from this very specific type of threat that emanates from authoritar­ian government­s,” said Elaine Pearson, Australia director at Human Rights Watch. “They’re so dependent on the income from feepaying students that it’s impacting the way they respond.”

During the 2019 unrest in Hong Kong, pro- Beijing groups at several Australian universiti­es tore down socalled Lennon Walls of colorful sticky notes erected in solidarity with the prodemocra­cy protesters. Students from Hong Kong at Australian National University in Canberra, the capital, began covering their faces at rallies, worried they would be reported to the Chinese Embassy.

Wu Lebao, a Chinesebor­n activist who gained asylum in Australia and is a student at ANU, said students from China weaponized campus policies against discrimina­tion by ref lexively labeling any criticism of Beijing as racist, often causing administra­tors to panic.

“They use Australia’s openness against it,” Wu said.

That summer, Pavlou approached leaders of the University of Queensland’s Hong Kong student associatio­n, offering to help stage a sit- in.

The grandson of Greek Cypriot immigrants, Pavlou was an academic star — he’d made the dean’s list twice and won a poetry prize while pursuing a triple major in philosophy, history and English literature. He had a history of depression and could be abrasive but was beginning to f ind his political voice as a social demo

crat inf luenced by Bernie Sanders and the teachings of his Catholic high school.

Reading about Beijing ’s mass imprisonme­nt of the Uighur minority, he was disgusted by Australia’s response.

“No one on the Australian left was talking about it,” he said. “On the right, the mining titans were going, ‘ The trade is so important, we can’t stuff that up.’ Everyone was playing politics while innocent people were suffering. That our largest trading partner had 1 million Muslims in camps — how is that not national news every single day?”

Built like an upturned broom, with a wall of gelled hair atop a slender frame, Pavlou hardly looked as if he was spoiling for a f ight. On July 24, he showed up half an hour late to the rally. He was attacked three times, once by a man who struck him in the back of the head from behind, before police dispersed the crowd.

Pavlou wondered whether the consulate had mobilized the opposition, especially after a leader of the pro- Beijing side let slip that some in his group were not students. Some had hid their faces behind masks.

Hours after the protest, the university said it supported “open, respectful and lawful free speech, including debate about ideas we may not all support or agree with.”

Pavlou was expecting a harsher condemnati­on of the violence and an investigat­ion into his attackers. The university did not respond, even after Australia’s foreign minister rebuked Xu, the Chinese consul general, for encouragin­g “disruptive or potentiall­y violent behavior.”

Campus administra­tors declined an interview request, and Xu did not respond to messages.

Soon after Xu’s statement, Chinese nationalis­ts began f looding Pavlou’s social media accounts with bile.

“China is not something your country can provoke.” “White trash pig.” “I will hire a killer through

deep web and then kill your family.”

“Your mother will be raped till dead.”

The threats alarmed Pavlou’s parents, who ran a grocery in Brisbane and avoided politics. When Pavlou called a protest the following week, they yelled at him to stop. Soon the family was barely speaking to him. His teenage brother and sister accused him of putting them all at risk.

His main target was Peter Hoj, the university’s vice chancellor and its leading advocate of engagement with China. Hoj had served on the governing council of the Chinese state agency that oversaw the global cultural centers known as Confucius Institutes, including one at the University of Queensland. In 2015, the institutes named him an “outstandin­g individual of the year” at a ceremony in Shanghai.

The institutes — partly funded by China and offering language and other instructio­n from a Communist Party- approved curriculum — were recently labeled a propaganda operation by the U. S. State Department; dozens on U. S. campuses have closed. At the University of Queensland, one Confucius- designed economics course espoused Beijing ’s talking points about Uighurs, including that the “majority claimed to be connected with overseas extremist groups.”

Late last year, the university renewed its Confucius Institute agreement through 2024, although it added a provision strengthen­ing its control over the curriculum. The deal proved lucrative for Hoj, who earned a bonus of $ 148,000 for meeting his performanc­e goals, one of which was deepening ties with China.

Pavlou tweeted that Hoj was “deeply compromise­d” by the relationsh­ip: “This is why he doesn’t care that students on his campus are bashed by masked CCP thugs.”

Hoj, who retired in June, declined to be interviewe­d. A Queensland state anti- corruption commission this year found no evidence he’d acted improperly.

Pavlou fashioned himself as a leftist provocateu­r, pushing his cause with memes and stunts one moment, passionate­ly condemning genocide the next. In October 2019, he ran for a student seat on the university senate, where Hoj was a member. He pledged to devote the $ 37,000 salary to human rights organizati­ons — and won.

His new position didn’t stop him from unsparingl­y trolling anyone who wasn’t in lockstep with his opposition to the Communist Party. In one Facebook post, he held a f lame to a book of Xi’s speeches outside the Chinese consulate in Sydney. Planning to start Chinese language classes, he joked about “giving Confucius Institute instructor mental breakdown.”

Administra­tors watched with growing dismay.

On April 9, Pavlou opened his email to f ind a 186- page document from the university titled “Disciplina­ry Matters.” It contained 11 allegation­s of misconduct ranging from the serious — harassing and bullying students and staff, damaging the school’s reputation — to the frivolous, such as using a pen at a campus store without paying.

That night, facing possible expulsion, he drove to a parking lot and cried.

The dossier was a detailed chronicle of Pavlou’s social media behavior. Some of it was ugly. Weeks into the COVID- 19 pandemic, he had donned an orange hazmat suit outside the Confucius Institute and said he was locking it down “UNTIL BIOHAZARD RISK CONTAINED” — a “prank” he later regretted.

Friends defended Pavlou, especially students from Hong Kong, even though they feared reprisals from the Chinese government.

“Drew’s sometimes impulsive and irrational, like he hasn’t really thought of the consequenc­es before acting or saying stuff,” said Jack Yiu, a 23- year- old postgradua­te student. “But his beliefs are in the right place.”

Pavlou acknowledg­ed making the statements but argued that the university was punishing him for his activism. The anxiety and depression that had dogged him since childhood resurfaced. He upped his medication and decided to f ight back, buoyed by growing public support, pro bono lawyers and a drumbeat of revelation­s that raised pressure on the university.

The Australian Strategic Policy Institute think tank revealed that a former professor who returned to China had founded a company specializi­ng in surveillan­ce technology. The news raised questions about whether Australian research funds had helped Beijing monitor Uighurs or other groups.

The university said it “does not condone misuse of its research” but did not comment on the details of the report.

In one move aimed at quieting critics, university officials said they would stop appointing foreign officials to honorary positions. But they allowed Xu, the Chinese diplomat, to keep his unpaid professors­hip until it expires in 2021. ( This year, a Brisbane magistrate dismissed a case Pavlou f iled against Xu for inciting violence, ruling that he was protected by diplomatic immunity.)

“Drew’s methods may have been provocativ­e, but he’s courageous, and he has brought important scrutiny to a number of issues,” said Pearson at Human Rights Watch. “Instead of directing its energies into throwing him out, the university should have focused on addressing Chinese government interfer

ence on its campus.”

Administra­tors enlisted a top- tier law f irm, Minter Ellison, to serve as prosecutor in Pavlou’s disciplina­ry proceeding­s. Another firm it hired, Clayton Utz, threatened Pavlou with contempt charges for attempting to use in his defense documents subpoenaed in a separate legal matter.

“Hiring two internatio­nal law f irms, compiling this dossier — it was appalling how they could do that to a 20- year- old student who had mental health issues,” said Patrick Jory, a history lecturer who taught Pavlou. “I just felt disgust at the way these powerful, senior men were victimizin­g this kid.”

On May 29, the disciplina­ry panel handed Pavlou a two- year suspension. The verdict surprised even the university chancellor, Peter Varghese, a former Australian diplomat, who expressed concern at “the severity of the penalty.”

Six weeks later, an appeals committee threw out several of the most serious allegation­s and reduced Pavlou’s suspension to one semester.

Pavlou did not celebrate. The weight of the penalty, a year shy of completing his degree, broke his bravado.

“All these people sign a petition, all these politician­s speak up,” he said in a Facebook video, holding back tears. “But just — nothing changes.”

Things were changing, however. While Pavlou served his suspension, the Chinese government accelerate­d a trade and diplomatic war that has underlined the risks of yoking Australia’s economy to an authoritar­ian system.

Unlike their counterpar­ts in academia, Australian political leaders often pushed back against Beijing. Australia was the f irst country to ban the Chinese tech giant Huawei from its 5G networks and has criticized Beijing’s policies in the South China Sea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Xinjiang. After intelligen­ce agencies found that pro- Beijing donors were funneling funds to Australian politician­s, the government passed legislatio­n to prevent espionage and foreign interferen­ce.

The last straw for China appeared to come in April, when Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s government led calls for an independen­t inquiry into the origins of the COVID- 19 pandemic. One Communist Party propagandi­st said Australia needed to be put in its place — like scraping the gum off the bottom of a shoe.

Beijing has since blocked billions of dollars in Australian wine, barley and other exports, while refusing calls from the country’s ministers, expelling its journalist­s and issuing travel warnings to Australia for students and tourists.

“If you make China the enemy,” a Chinese official warned Australian news media, “China will be the enemy.”

“It’s hard to know whether we’ve reached the bottom, because when it feels like we have, then a few more trapdoors open, and everyone jumps into them,” said Richard McGregor, a senior fellow at the independen­t Lowy Institute.

The spat has shattered the idea that Australia could balance its economic partnershi­p with China and its alliance with the U. S. — and signaled to Beijing ’s other trading partners that political disagreeme­nts will carry a cost.

“China doesn’t want you to have it both ways,” McGregor said.

Although prominent business leaders continue to argue that the trade relationsh­ip must be rescued, public opinion is moving in the other direction. A Lowy Institute poll this year found that only 23% of Australian­s trusted China, down from 52% in 2018, and 9 in 10 wanted the government to f ind alternativ­e markets for its goods.

In the roiling national debate, Pavlou now occupies a prominent place — and Beijing has noticed. In August, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian accused the 21- year- old by name of “pursuing an antiChina agenda out of political motivation­s.”

“Last year, when I was advocating for boycotting Chinese goods, divestment and sanctions, a lot of people called me crazy and radical,” Pavlou said. “Now you see even some foreign policy experts preaching this strategy.”

He spent his 14- week suspension hunkered down at home, having patched things up with his family. Working out of his bedroom — where the walls are plastered with the f lags of East Turkestan, a symbol of Uighur independen­ce, and Mexican Zapatista rebels — he kept busy tutoring high school students, setting up a human rights group called Defend Democracy and preparing for state Supreme Court hearings in a $ 2.6- million defamation lawsuit he filed against the university.

At midnight Nov. 23, when the suspension expired, he and some friends lighted cigars at the campus entrance and popped bottles of bubbly. Someone yelled, “He’s back!”

In February, when the new semester begins, Australia’s most notorious undergradu­ate will return. He may not be alone in hoping it will be his f inal year of classes.

‘ I just felt disgust at the way these powerful, senior men were victimizin­g this kid.’ — Patrick Jory, University of Queensland history lecturer

 ?? Photog r aphs by Patrick Hamilton AFP/ Getty I mages ?? SUPPORTERS of the Hong Kong pro- democracy protests, wearing masks to conceal their identities, post sticky notes on a “Lennon Wall” in August 2019 at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
Photog r aphs by Patrick Hamilton AFP/ Getty I mages SUPPORTERS of the Hong Kong pro- democracy protests, wearing masks to conceal their identities, post sticky notes on a “Lennon Wall” in August 2019 at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.
 ??  ?? DREW PAVLOU received death threats and was denounced by a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman over his public criticism of China’s repression of Uighur Muslims and its crackdown in Hong Kong.
DREW PAVLOU received death threats and was denounced by a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman over his public criticism of China’s repression of Uighur Muslims and its crackdown in Hong Kong.
 ?? Rick Rycroft Associated Press ?? CHINESE President Xi Jinping, left, and then- Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott speak in 2014 in Canberra, Australia, as memorandum­s of understand­ing were signed to strengthen trade between the nations.
Rick Rycroft Associated Press CHINESE President Xi Jinping, left, and then- Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott speak in 2014 in Canberra, Australia, as memorandum­s of understand­ing were signed to strengthen trade between the nations.

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