Chicago Sun-Times

A CAMPUS— AND COUNTRY — SHAKEN

Mystery of missing Chinese scholar rattles U. of I., leaves parents a world away worrying about sending their children to study in U. S.

- Tang reported from Beijing. BY MICHAEL TARM AND DIDI TANG

Yingying Zhang, the daughter of a working- class factory driver from China, took the same career path as many other young Chinese academics before her: She traveled to a university in the U. S. with dreams of one day landing a professors­hip and being able to help her parents financiall­y.

But just weeks after arriving at the University of Illinois, the 26- year- old visiting scholar in agricultur­e sciences stepped off a bus on a sunny afternoon and got into a black hatchback. She hasn’t been seen since.

Her disappeara­nce on her way to sign an apartment lease is being treated as a kidnapping. The case has shaken staff and students at Illinois’ flagship public school in Urbana- Champaign.

And it’s led some parents of the more than 300,000 Chinese students currently studying at American universiti­es to question whether it’s safe to send to their children to the United States.

U. of I. students and others planned to gather Thursday to show support for Zhang, who got into a black car on June 9 and hasn’t been seen since. The FBI announced this week the car had been found, but it provided no detail.

Zhang’s father, Ronggao Zhang, traveled to the university from the family’s home in Nanping, China, to await word on his daughter. He had a message for whoever might have abducted her.

“We will forgive you,” he said in a telephone interview. “But please, let Yingying go.”

The 53- year- old, speaking through a translator, had a message for his daughter, too: “Yingying, please be strong.”

Local police and the FBI say Zhang’s case is a top priority, though they have withheld details of their investigat­ion, even from her father, said Yingying Zhang’s boyfriend, who sat in on the weekend interview with the father from the 44,000- student campus.

“So you can imagine the anxiety,” Xiaolin Hou said. “It’s almost torture ... not knowing anything.”

Chinese media have covered Zhang’s disappeara­nce, with her friends and acquaintan­ces drawing attention to her case on Chinese social media sites such as WeChat.

“There’s so little we can do at home, but we’d like the local police in the United States to stay on top of the case and not to let it slide,” said Zhao Kaiyun, a roommate of Zhang’s at Peking University Shenzhen Graduate School. Zhang graduated last year with a masters’ degree in environmen­tal engineerin­g.

The University of Illinois has the largest Chinese student population of any U. S. college, with 5,600 students enrolled, according to U. S. government data.

By chance, U. of I. representa- tives recently held a previously scheduled orientatio­n session in China for students headed to the school and their parents. Several attendees asked about Zhang’s disappeara­nce, said Robin Kaler, the associate chancellor for public affairs.

“Parents were very concerned,” she said. “We obviously tell them that it is a very safe community in general, but that there are instances when horrible things can happen. And this is one instance.”

Urbana- Champaign, with a population around 250,000, typically records no more than a few homicides each year.

The university’s reputation as a leader in agricultur­e studies attracted Zhang to the school. She’s been doing research on crop photosynth­esis, Kaler said. The expectatio­n was that she would begin work on her Ph. D. in the fall.

One central motivation for everything she did was a desire to help her parents in Nanping, a city in a picturesqu­e part of China amid mountain ranges and forests, her boyfriend said. She set aside part of her research income to buy her parents devices to make their lives easier, including a microwave and a cellphone.

Her boyfriend and her father described Zhang as bright and studious, fun- loving and outgoing. They said Zhang is also street- smart and cautious and would not normally get into a car with a stranger unless somehow duped or forced.

Some reports suggested she may have called a ride- sharing service because she was running late, though investigat­ors have not confirmed that. Local police said they received a separate report of someone posing as a police officer trying to lure women into his car, but they have not said whether it could be related.

The 5- foot- 4, 110- pound Zhang, wearing a baseball cap and carrying a backpack, was seen on a surveillan­ce video standing by the black Saturn Astra for a few minutes before getting in.

Investigat­ors say the driver appeared to be a white male.

Zhang’s father refuses to let himself think she won’t be found alive. “I will wait for you,” he said. “And we will definitely find you.”

 ?? | ZHAO KAIYUN VIA AP ?? Yingying Zhang poses for photos during graduation at the entrance to Beijing University in China in July 2016.
| ZHAO KAIYUN VIA AP Yingying Zhang poses for photos during graduation at the entrance to Beijing University in China in July 2016.
 ?? HEATHER COIT/ THE NEWS- GAZETTE VIA AP ?? Ronggao Zhang ( right), Yingying Zhang’s father, has traveled to Urbana- Champaign from the family’s home in Nanping, China, and pleaded for his daughter’s safe return.
HEATHER COIT/ THE NEWS- GAZETTE VIA AP Ronggao Zhang ( right), Yingying Zhang’s father, has traveled to Urbana- Champaign from the family’s home in Nanping, China, and pleaded for his daughter’s safe return.
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