One of the better Chinese proverbs goes like this: “Kill a chicken to frighten the monkeys.”
It needs little explanation and applies very much to the case of Australian resident and highly regarded China scholar Feng Chongyi, a Chinese citizen with an Australian wife and daughter who was held extra-judiciously in the southern city of Guangzhou for a week until his release.
Feng’s “crime”, in the eyes of China’s increasingly repressive Communist Party regime, has been to critique the CCP and its polices — in particular, focusing on the crushing of the Weiquan, the mainly Beijing-based coterie of brave human rights lawyers, many of whom are now incarcerated for speaking truth to power.
The crushingly heavy hand of the CPP was certainly deployed in Feng’s (the chicken) case to “remind” other academics (the monkeys) not to mess with the party and its increasingly repressive policies; to self-censor, to bury their ethical duty to seek the truth. It is an authoritarian dictatorship attempting to silence critics.
Recently, there has been a raft of criminal cases involving Australian citizens, from Rio Tinto’s Stern Hu (still incarcerated) to Matthew Ng and Charlotte Chou in Guangzhou. Feng’s detention, which made bigger headlines across the world than it did in Australia, is also completely of a piece with the multi-pronged stepping-up of already crushing censorship/repression of thought under Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
One of these prongs is the increasingly censorious rules on all universities inside China — institutions that Xi has called to become strongholds of the CCP and with which so many of Australia’s own universities have increasingly strong links.
Much of this comes under the even broader umbrella of China’s multibillion-dollar global soft-power push, which works in sometimes heavy-handed — but arguably effective — ways, like in Feng’s case, and other times in much more insidious ways.
[James Packer’s dilemma: try to save Crown staff in China, or let the chips fall where they may?]
China has creeping influence in Australian universities. Its state-sponsored Confucius Institutes (CIs) have proliferated in recent years and are embedded in most top-tier unis as well as in a range of second- and third-tier institutions. Confucius Institutes are, on the surface, relatively benign, but some universities in Europe and the United States are unwinding their CI relationships, believing that this is not necessarily the case.
More overtly, wealthy Chinese donors — and, to be clear, one does not get to be a billionaire, or within cooee of that status in China, without having the requisite party connections — pump a lot of money into Australian universities. Feng’s Australian employer, the University of Technology, Sydney, is a prime case in point. Its latest building — the crumpled paper bag landmark in Ultimo, designed by superstar architect Frank Gehry — was funded by Chau Chak Wing, a Guangzhou magnate who controls much of the largely pro-Beijing Chinese-language press in Australia and is known to be litigious towards Australian media. Chau has duchessed a generation of Australian politicians, from John Howard to Kevin Rudd and Wayne Swan, as well as senior Australian journalists and commentators including the Australian Financial Review’s Jennifer Hewett and Sky News chief Angelos Frangopoulos, at his ranch and conference centre outside Guangzhou.
More recently, Chau has bequeathed $15 million to a museum at the University of Sydney, which will also bear his name.
A rival Guangzhou businessma, shovelled millions of dollars into the creation of UTS’ controversially pro-Beijing Australia-China Relations Institute, which is chaired by former foreign minister Bob Carr.
Australia’s universities are also increasingly reliant on international student fees, largely from Asia, with China, once again, at the head of the queue. The latest federal Education Department figures show that there were 554,179 full fee-paying international students in 2016, an increase of more than 10% on the previous year. More than one-quarter of these are from China, and many are the children of senior CCP officials. Chinese students make up as much as 20% of the cohort at some institutions.
Many Australian universities run joint courses with Chinese universities. All tertiary institutions in China are subject to local rules and regulations, which include the compulsory teaching of Marxist-Leninist ideology and where dissenting voices are systematically being silenced. But we have not heard one peep from Australia’s universities about this, and to the best of Crikey’s knowledge, the campaign of censorship and crimping of academic freedom has not triggered any so far to pull up stumps in the Middle Kingdom (but we are happy to be corrected).
To cap it all off — and when you think about it, this is a huge win for China — Bob Carr, via a piece by veteran News Corp press gallery staffer Malcolm Farr, has taken credit for Feng being finally allowed home.
[The problem with our over-reliance on Chinese tourism]
Another story by The Australian’s Troy Bramston (which named “Julia” Bishop as the Australian Foreign Minister) also delivered a China lecture from Carr: “But China is not going to change its system because of lectures from foreigners. Meanwhile, we have got to deal with China as it is.”
Farr and Bramston were two of four journalists on an all-expenses-paid junket with Carr to China during the week that Feng was detained, without any sense of when he would be released. Rather than add his signature to a an open letter from the world’s leading China scholars, Carr said he would make “private representations”. Crikey has learned, in no uncertain terms, that Carr had absolutely nothing to do with it.
Carr’s outpourings gilded the lie that says if you are “friends” with China, you can help “fix things” — a big win for China’s university investments and soft power. But you have to wonder if Stern Hu and Feng Chonyi would agree.
While money from Chinese institutions may or may not be ‘tainted’, if that is the appropriate word, the reliance by universities on full-fee paying international students is not unlike investors buying into the housing market. If things go sour, and there are plenty of things that could happen to make that so, the university sector will be more than decimated, and none more so than the elite group of universities.
Anyone who has not been asleep under a rock will realise that since about 2007 China has increasingly controlled the local expat community. We saw Chinese guards manhandling OUR citizens in OUR country. We have seen increasing influence from the embassy trying to control or intimidate local Chinese student associations and attempts to control the behaviour of residents here. Meanwhile we clearly have a lot of hot money coming into our real estate market to be laundered. Bob Carr has become a fool and our slavish worship of China has infested the coalition to the extent that the CCP would appear to own some of them. China has worked with tribute and economic power for at least the last 500 years, except for a period of European skullduggery which they still resent and I suspect are gaining revenge for. Respect them, trade with them, but do not bow and scrape to them. Ask Vietnam about how they steal resources.
Why does anyone keep gracing this autocratic regime with its own self-endowed title of the Chinese Communist Party? If this ruling caste of kleptocratic sybarites is an any way “communist”, then I am Karl Marx reincarnate. Expose them for what they are – a modern-day version of the Kuomintang warlords.
Stern Hu was convicted of corruption on fairly uncontrovertible evidence. After initial concern was expressed by the Australian Government and his then employer (Rio Tinto) they backed away quickly when (unusually) the mainland government allowed the trial to be relatively open and the evidence (which was not disputed) to come out. Essentially, he was taking bribes to allocate (at the time, scarce) iron ore resources to particular buyers
Whatever one thinks of the Chinese government or of its activities here, the Stern Hu case is not a good one to use!
With they had kept trouble maker Feng in China. Not even an Australian citizen and trying to cause trouble between our countries. He and his family should be sent back to China as he cannot be trusted in any way. Sly sneering grin he has.