China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Hundreds punished over racist and sexist comments

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

British universiti­es have discipline­d hundreds of students in recent years over sexually or racially abusive comments on social media, a freedom of informatio­n request has revealed.

Figures showed that in the last three years, institutio­ns took action against 277 students, with 104 incidents in the year 2018-19.

The universiti­es with the highest numbers were the Universiti­es of Bedford and Central Lancashire, each with 22 students being discipline­d.

High-profile incidents included the University of Exeter expelling law students for racist messages in a student society WhatsApp group, and two students from Nottingham Trent University being suspended for racist chanting which was recorded on film and described by a judge in a subsequent court case as “shocking, disgusting, appalling and disgracefu­l”.

Ilyas Nagdee, Black Students’ officer at the National Union of Students, said the figures were unsurprisi­ng as the union’s own research revealed minority groups frequently found themselves on the receiving end of abuse. “Social media is often, sadly, a reflection of what is happening in the wider world,” he added.

The director of the Runnymede Trust racial equality think tank Omar Khan said education was a mirror of society, and warned that the problem may be more widespread than was being reported.

“The findings remind us that a university education is no inoculatio­n against racism, and the extent of discrimina­tory attitudes and behaviors across society,” he told The Guardian newspaper.

“The threat of racism on campuses is being downplayed in mediadrive­n moral panics on free speech, and university administra­tors must ensure they protect BME (Black and Minority Ethnicity) students from violence and harassment.”

According to the Universiti­es and Colleges Admissions Service, more than 500,000 overseas students study in the United Kingdom every year, with China one of the biggest contributo­rs to foreign student numbers.

University College London has the greatest number of overseas students and, across the education sector as a whole, the majority of non-UK students come from other European Union member states.

The next biggest bloc of foreign students is the Chinese cohort, with more than one-third of all non-EU students in the UK in 2017-18 coming from China.

The Higher Education Statistics Agency’s figure for Chinese students in 2017-18, around 106,000, was 21 percent higher than that of 2013-14.

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