Award Banner
Award Banner

Long advantageous, Harvard's China ties become a political liability

Long advantageous, Harvard's China ties become a political liability
PHOTO: Reuters

WASHINGTON - Harvard University's links to China, long an asset to the school, have become a liability as the Trump administration levels accusations that its campus is plagued by Beijing-backed influence operations.

On Thursday (May 22) the administration moved to revoke Harvard's ability to enroll foreign students, saying it fostered antisemitism and coordinated with the Chinese Communist Party. Among them are Chinese nationals who made up about a fifth of Harvard's foreign student intake in 2024, the university said.

A US judge on Friday temporarily blocked the administration's order after the Cambridge, Massachusetts, university sued.

The concerns about Chinese government influence at Harvard are not new. Some US lawmakers, many of them Republicans, have expressed worries that China is manipulating Harvard to gain access to US advanced technology, to circumvent US security laws and to stifle criticism of it in the United States.

"For too long, Harvard has let the Chinese Communist Party exploit it," a White House official told Reuters on Friday, adding the school had "turned a blind eye to vigilante CCP-directed harassment on-campus."

Harvard did not respond immediately to requests for comment.

The school has said the revocation was a punishment for Harvard's "perceived viewpoint," which it called a violation of the right to free speech as guaranteed by the US Constitution's First Amendment.

Harvard's links to China, which include research partnerships and China-focused academic centres, are longstanding. The ties have yielded major financial gifts, influence in international affairs and global prestige for the school.

Former Harvard President Larry Summers, who has at times been critical of the university, called the Trump administration's move to block foreign students the most serious attack on the university to date.

"It's hard to imagine a greater strategic gift to China than for the United States to sacrifice its role as a beacon to the world," he said in an interview with Politico.

Health training 

In a statement, the Chinese embassy in Washington said: "Educational exchanges and co-operation between China and the United States are mutually beneficial and should not be stigmatised."

The presence of Chinese students at Harvard and the school's links to the country are not evidence of wrongdoing. But the complexity and overlapping nature of the connections have been opaque enough to attract attention and criticism.

The China-related issues cited by the Trump administration echo the work of the Republican-led House of Representatives' Select Committee on China.

For example, Harvard provided public health-related training to Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (XPCC) officials after 2020. That year the US imposed sanctions on the Chinese paramilitary organisation for its role in alleged human rights abuses against Uyghurs and other Muslim ethnic groups in Xinjiang.

The Department of Homeland Security said those engagements with XPCC continued "as recently as 2024."

China vehemently denies any accusations of wrongdoing in Xinjiang, but both the Trump and Biden administrations have defined Beijing's policies in the region as "genocide."

In another episode that has drawn questions, US business intelligence firm Strategy Risks said that Ronnie Chan, who facilitated a US$350 million (S$450 million) donation to Harvard in 2014 that led to its school of public health being named for his father, property developer T.H. Chan, is a member of the China-United States Exchange Foundation.

The Hong Kong-based organisation, which says its aim is to foster dialogue between the two countries, has been classified as a foreign principal under US law, requiring US lobbyists working for it to disclose that work to the US government.

Former professor convicted

Former Harvard Professor Charles Lieber was scrutinised by a Trump programme started in 2018 called the China Initiative, which was focused on fighting Chinese espionage and intellectual property theft and investigated researchers and universities over whether they disclosed financial ties to Beijing.

He was convicted in 2021 of lying about his ties to China in connection with federally funded research. In April, he became a full-time professor at a Chinese university.

The initiative was halted under the Biden administration after critics said it led to racial profiling and a culture of fear that chilled scientific collaboration.

US lawmakers from both parties have expressed worries about the efforts by Beijing-linked student associations to monitor political activities. In April 2024, a Harvard student activist was physically ejected from an event by a Chinese exchange student - not faculty or security staff - for interrupting a speech by China's Ambassador Xie Feng.

Pressure has mounted on Harvard in Trump's second term, with the Education Department in April asking the university to provide records on its foreign funding after it said a review of required reporting on large foreign-source gifts and contracts revealed incomplete and inaccurate disclosures.

The Trump administration's moves against Harvard have nonetheless alarmed some China experts.

Yaqiu Wang, a US-based human rights researcher who came to the US from China as a student, said the Trump administration's move to ban foreign students at Harvard was "completely counterproductive."

"The concerns over the Chinese government's transnational repression attempts to silence critics are very legitimate, and also espionage concerns are legitimate." Wang said. "But to try to address that by banning, not only Chinese students, but foreign students, is just beyond comprehension."

Read Also
world
China pledges support for overseas students after Trump's Harvard curb

Source: Reuters

homepage

trending

trending
    Malaysia to begin VEP enforcement for Singapore vehicles from July 1
    South Korea's new president Lee Jae-myung vows economic revival, judgement on martial law
    'Both cases likely result of accidents': NParks addresses concerns over community cat deaths
    Ayumi Hamasaki denies Elon Musk fathered her child
    Taiwan's popular noodle chain Xiao Hun Mian opens first Singapore outlet at Raffles City
    Him Law explains the 'enjoyment' of playing villainous characters
    'I feel incredibly honoured': Drum major who dreamed of role as teen leads Singapore Police Force Band in centennial celebration
    We asked frequent concertgoers what makes the ultimate concert experience – here's what they said
    Thai actor Nonkul loses mother to cancer shortly before birthday, cancels fanmeet
    East-West Line disruption: SMRT to be fined $3m for September 2024 incident
    New resort chalet run by co-living brand Coliwoo to open in Pasir Ris
    Online claims about Covid-19 autopsy and vaccination laws are false: MOH

Singapore

Singapore
    • 12-year-old girl locks herself in room, police negotiators called in
    • $1,097 for 3 pieces: Woman calls cop over clothing bill at Far East Plaza shop
    • PHV drivers rally to raise funds after Grab driver dies suddenly, leaving behind 2 children
    • Enforcement officer lays tape measure on road to assess illegal parking, impresses netizens
    • Beach Road slashing: Man gets 19 years' jail, caning for attempted murder of wife
    • Fallen tree, debris all over: 3 taken to hospital following Hougang road accident
    • Man, 44, charged with murder of 79-year-old woman in Sengkang
    • Parts of Hougang hit by power outage; SP Group apologises
    • 'We didn't think twice': SBS Transit staff return bag containing $10k to passenger within an hour
    • Taking sides, without context, 'breeds irrelevance': Chan Chun Sing on global order and security

Entertainment

Entertainment
    • Hong Kong celebrity couple Benjamin Yuen and Bowie Cheung expecting second baby
    • 'I made a fool of myself': Malaysian woman trying to buy G-Dragon concert tickets accidentally buys ones for Kenny G
    • Zhang Zhenhuan's daughter, 3, tries out acting, gets visit to Shanghai Disneyland as reward
    • 'We will sue him until he goes bankrupt': Victim's mother plans to sue ex-actor Ian Fang
    • Sabrina Carpenter, Daniel Radcliffe and more sign open letter supporting LGBTQ+ youth suicide prevention programmes
    • Michael J. Fox appeals for help finding lost Back to the Future guitar
    • Harvey Weinstein used Hollywood clout to abuse women, prosecutor tells jury
    • Shirley Manson 'doesn't care' if she is cancelled
    • TXT pop-up store at Plaza Singapura opens in June
    • King of the Hill star Jonathan Joss, 59, dies in shooting

Lifestyle

Lifestyle
    • Unable to bear children, she proposed annulment of marriage so he could start a family. He chose love
    • Miss World 2025 sees first winner from Thailand - meet the political science student who champions breast cancer awareness
    • Jurassic World, inflatable playgrounds and more: Family-friendly events and activities this June holiday
    • Porridge, pancakes and more: Popeyes enters Singapore's fast-food breakfast game
    • Kyoto's viral Kichi Kichi Omurice chef is coming to Singapore, here's how you can meet him
    • Is Phnom Penh Southeast Asia's most underrated capital? Here's why it is time to visit
    • Micromanaged, mothered and finally free – learning to love mum from afar
    • We tour freehold landed homes within 1km of Tao Nan & CHIJ Katong (from $3.88m in 2021)
    • Double trouble: Singapore's first tag-team twins make their pro wrestling debut
    • Uncovering the secrets behind Chagee’s best-selling jasmine green milk tea

Digicult

Digicult
    • Slim, sleek, but slightly too short-lived: Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge review
    • World's best Dota 2 teams to compete for $1m prize pool in Singapore in November
    • A $500 wake-up call: How the Samsung Galaxy Ring made me realise my stress
    • Monster Hunter Wilds producer explains how game has remained unique and fresh over 20 years
    • Initiative by IMDA, AI Verify Foundation tests AI accuracy, trustworthiness in real-world scenarios
    • Under siege? Helldivers 2's latest city to be invaded by aliens could be spoof of Singapore
    • Honor 400 Series launches in Singapore with first free in-device AI image-to-video tool
    • Home Team humanoid robots to be deployed by mid-2027, $100m to be invested: Josephine Teo
    • Ado concert review: Singer without a face ignites fans while in cage with only silhouette visible
    • EU and US authorities take down malware network

Money

Money
    • Wall Street equity indexes close higher after US-China tariff truce
    • Giant deal: Malaysian company to acquire Cold Storage and Giant supermarket chains in Singapore
    • 4-room HDBs without million-dollar sales - where to still find value today
    • $1.16m for a 4-room HDB flat in Clementi? Why this integrated development commands premium prices
    • Why these buyers chose older leasehold condos — and have no regrets
    • Can you still own multiple properties in Singapore? Here's what you need to know in 2025
    • Selling your home for the first time? Here's a step-by-step timeline to follow in Singapore
    • Why some central 2-bedroom homeowners in Singapore are stuck
    • How the interest rate cycle works - and what it means for your home loan
    • Tampines, Sengkang and more towns set new 2-room all-time-high records - is this part of a broader trend?

Latest

Latest
  • White House calls South Korea election 'fair', expresses concern about Chinese influence
  • Riding wave of voter anger, South Korea's Lee now faces policy challenges
  • 5 countries elected to UN Security Council for 2026/27
  • China tells US envoy Washington must get ties back on 'right track'
  • China rejects Dutch minister's spying accusation, says tech achievements not 'stolen'
  • Top Cuban official accuses US of trying to provoke conflict
  • Rubio praises bravery of Chinese people killed in Tiananmen Square crackdown
  • New Jersey mayor sues Trump officials over arrest at immigration centre
  • Britain pledges to deliver 100,000 drones to Ukraine by April 2026

In Case You Missed It

In Case You Missed It
  • Over 170 travellers nabbed for evading GST, smuggling large sums of cash in island-wide operation
  • Woman crawls out of storm drain in shocking Manila street scene
  • DBS staff, police stop 2 victims from losing $820k to government official impersonation scams
  • 'Be humble in victory': PM Wong sends traditional 'Rules of Prudence' letter to PAP MPs after GE
  • Pedestrian, 84, dies in accident involving minibus in Choa Chu Kang
  • NDP 2025 marks SG60 with expanded celebrations from Padang to Marina Bay
  • Obesity rates are rising in Singapore, but is overeating the only cause?
  • Trump administration blocks Harvard from enrolling foreign students, threatens broader crackdown 
  • 'We apologise for the operational lapse': NUS responds to backlash over disposal of Yale-NUS books
This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.