China Daily Global Weekly

Chinese scientists demand normalcy

‘China Initiative’ in US denounced for racial profiling, hurting academic work

- By YIFAN XU in Washington yifanxu@chinadaily­usa.com

The leader of a protest against the government’s so-called China Initiative has called for the return of a “normal atmosphere” for Chinese scientists working in the United States.

Haipei Shue, president of the United Chinese Americans and organizer of the protest, marched along with scores of other people outside the Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building on Jan 12.

Shue told China Daily that many innocent Chinese American scientists have been put in a position of suspicion because of the so-called initiative started under former president Donald Trump. Shue said the measure is “hurting the science, hurting Chinese American scientists and hurting the progress of this country”.

“We demand the federal government to end the ‘China Initiative’ as soon as possible and to restore the normal atmosphere for the Chinese American scientists to get back to do their research rather than fear for their future,” Shue said.

The protesters, many of whom were Chinese Americans, opposed what they said is racial profiling, along with selective, overzealou­s prosecutio­n and mistreatme­nt of those scientists.

They presented photos of eight scientists who they said the “China Initiative” has improperly prosecuted in recent years, including seven Chinese American scientists and one Egyptian American scientist. They chanted “End China Initiative”, “Stop profiling Chinese American scientists”, “We are scientists, not a spy” and “Science is global”.

The controvers­ial program was launched by the US Department of Justice in 2018 to probe trade secret theft and economic espionage activities considered as threats to US national security. The program now “appears to be an umbrella term for cases with almost any connection to China”, according to an investigat­ion published in December by MIT Technology Review.

“What is more, the climate of fear created by the prosecutio­ns has already pushed some talented scientists to leave the United States and made it more difficult for others to enter or stay. It endangered America’s ability to attract new talent in science and technology from China and worldwide,” said the article.

Chao Wu, a scientist who participat­ed in the protest, told the media that it is wrong for the federal government to take such action against Chinese scientists.

“The (charges against) Chinese scientists innocently implicated were eventually dismissed, but their careers and families have been significan­tly harmed. If the Chinese community wants to protect their rights, they must be brave enough to express themselves in a compliant manner, and only then will our voices be heard by the whole community,” Wu said.

One of the protesters, a business owner named Zhao who did not disclose his full name, told China Daily that the program is “fundamenta­lly wrong and not just about the scientists”. “The US government and DOJ should serve and protect rather than scare and persecute innocent people,” he said.

Stan Tsai, president of the Asian Pacific Islander American Public Affairs Associatio­n for the Greater DC Chapter, said the program is not good for China, the US and the world.

“Science is global and should benefit the world,” Tsai said. “By executing the ‘China Initiative’, the US is hindering the developmen­t of science and hurting the cooperatio­n between

China and the US, and the joint effort to fight the pandemic.”

After the protest, an online news conference for the victims and witnesses to the “China Initiative” was also hosted by the UCA, highlighti­ng personal stories, suffering and mistreatme­nt of the program’s targets at the hands of federal law enforcemen­t.

At the conference, US Representa­tive Judy Chu called the “China Initiative an exercise in racial profiling”, stressing that “numbers simply do not justify this program”.

“After three years of investigat­ions, over 150 defendants, at least 77 cases, the ‘China Initiative’ has just prosecuted, just one single conviction in a court of law,” Chu said. “This dismal record proves that the ‘China Initiative’ is flawed. The vast majority of the people investigat­ed have been Chinese academics, who have had the charges dropped without explanatio­n.”

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