Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese students find safety after Hong Kong unrest

- YANAN WANG

SHENZHEN, China — The mainland Chinese students arriving from Hong Kong huddled with their suitcases, waiting for a bus to take them to temporary accommodat­ions in this city across the border from the protest-wracked territory.

“We’ve just escaped,” said one postgradua­te student, among a dozen from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

After anti-government demonstrat­ors barricaded university campuses last week, hundreds of Chinese students retreated to the mainland city of Shenzhen, where the ruling Communist Party’s Youth League promised them a “warm home.”

The party organizati­on said in a notice last week that mainland students could stay free of charge at one of 12 designated youth hostels in the southern Chinese city less than 20 miles from Hong Kong.

The postgradua­te student said he feared for his safety after black-clad demonstrat­ors beat up a classmate. Protesters have written online that they would break into mainland students’ dorms and professors’ offices to check for Chinese flags.

“The situation has gradually deteriorat­ed,” he said. “It’s escalated from intimidati­on to threats. Everyone worries that he or she will be the next target.”

He and other students spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared being harassed by protesters, who have posted the private informatio­n of Hong Kong police officers and their family members online.

On the other side, social media users have publicly identified mainland Chinese who expressed sympathy for the protest movement.

Even as Chinese media such as the nationalis­tic Global Times newspaper described students fleeing campus “war zones,” Chinese authoritie­s are tightly controllin­g the narrative, and official notices about free housing don’t even mention the protests.

The Chinese University of Hong Kong has a Shenzhen campus that is giving lodging to fleeing students and university alumni working in Hong Kong. A teacher said they had received orders not to discuss the program publicly.

“We’re trying to be lowkey,” said the teacher, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to talk to the media.

“We don’t want to give the impression that we’re separate from Hong Kong,” she said. “This is just temporary. At the end of the day, we’re still all one family.”

The protests have been increasing­ly dominated by smaller groups of young, hardcore demonstrat­ors who have smashed storefront­s and started fires in public areas under the belief that violence is the only way to evoke a response from the government.

The fact that students are taking shelter from the tumult in Hong Kong presents a conundrum for the central government, both because Hong Kong is part of China and because Beijing has portrayed the protesters as a fringe group, with most of the population opposed to them.

The Chinese University Shenzhen campus received 600 applicatio­ns over two days from students seeking free housing. Several university alumni associatio­ns were offering similar programs.

The Communist Youth League is using an existing “Grad Home” program, which was establishe­d in 2013 for re- cent graduates seeking jobs in the tech hub. They are housed in small hotels and hostels across the city.

At a “Grad Home” in Shenzhen’s Futian district, boxes of water bottles were stacked in a lobby where a handful of red-vested staffers eagerly greeted visitors with the question: “Are you a mainland student from Hong Kong?”

Staffers at three hostels said they had received a directive from the Shenzhen Communist Youth League not to accept media interviews, though they said the league had arranged previous interviews with Chinese media.

A woman who answered the phone at the Communist Youth League said she was not aware of any media reports about the program and refused to give permission to interview workers at the hostels.

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