Global Times

Mauling mainlander­s shows HK’s decline

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At a forum between Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) president Wei Shyy and the university’s students on Wednesday, a mainland student was mauled by black-clad local students, and his head was broken. Radical Hong Kong student attackers claimed that the mainlander pushed a local. But video showed both hands of the mainland student were in his pockets. The local student’s fall was thus suspected of faking it.

In recent days, several Hong Kong universiti­es have become focal points of radical protests and violence. At the graduation ceremonies of HKUST and the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), masked graduates created trouble on stage and held demonstrat­ions on the campuses. HKUST students even urged their president to condemn police and laid siege to the president. The graduation ceremony at CUHK could not even proceed and had to end early.

Should these take place at prestigiou­s universiti­es? Should the campuses, where misdeeds such as intimidati­on and scuffles were repeatedly seen, be called prestigiou­s universiti­es? The masked black-clad students disgraced their colleges. They are turning wellknown Hong Kong universiti­es into the most unreasonab­le and most violent campuses in the world.

Many students, including those from the Chinese mainland, chose to have a shorter time or even gave up their chance to study at Hong Kong universiti­es. The number of students who make the same choice will only keep growing.

Mainland students have lost their freedom of speech at Hong Kong universiti­es. They might be harassed simply because they speak Putonghua. And their safety is now in jeopardy.

Hong Kong universiti­es are dropping in ranking. It is almost certain that the misbehavio­r on their campuses will have an impact on their rankings next year. If no emergency measures are taken, Hong Kong colleges will suffer the same fate as those in the island of Taiwan and become inferior among Asian universiti­es.

Excluding mainlander­s from colleges has become a trend at some Hong Kong universiti­es. They don’t understand that if Hong Kong colleges want to sustain their relatively top positions in world rankings, the resources from the mainland are significan­t. Without the mainland’s support, Hong Kong universiti­es are sure to decline, and may even perform worse than universiti­es in the island of Taiwan. If Hong Kong universiti­es become “community universiti­es” for a local population of only several millions, they will be completely marginaliz­ed.

Hong Kong universiti­es used to be competitiv­e before the city’s return to China. This shouldn’t be an excuse for self-consolatio­n. The mainland was backward then, but now its rise has changed everything. Whoever in the vicinity could develop closer ties with the mainland will be more capable of sustaining prosperity. Those who position themselves in a confrontat­ion with the mainland will come to a dead end.

Some radical Hong Kong students have been politicall­y brainwashe­d, almost losing their ability of independen­t thinking so that they view misdoings such as humiliatin­g teachers, beating peer students and destroying public property as something worth bragging about. They remind the mainlander­s of the radicals during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76).

Universiti­es in Hong Kong have been in a mess, but Hong Kong society is unable to stop the chaos. Hong Kong is in decline. Mainland society has done its best under the “one country, two systems” principle. If the chaotic situation continues, universiti­es in Hong Kong will no longer be suitable for mainland students. It’s believed that starting next year, mainland students would think twice before applying.

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