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Cornell students from China jeer, walk out on Uyghur student who asked lawmaker about Uyghur genocide

A group of international Chinese students from Cornell University staged a walkout and allegedly booed an Uyghur student during a public service career talk last week.

The walkout occurred after Fulbright scholar Rizwangul NurMuhammad spoke during the question-and-answer portion of a talk that was part of a weekly speaker series for the students of Cornell University's Master in Public Administration program on Thursday.

NurMuhammad asked guest speaker Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) about why the U.S. and the international community have spoken up against Russia for invading Ukraine yet remain quiet on the issue of the alleged genocide of the Uyghurs, the most persecuted ethnic minority in China.

NurMuhammad said that her brother, Mewlan, was arrested in 2017 during the Chinese government’s crackdown on the Uyghurs in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. The student also said that she has not been able to speak to her brother since his detention.

As Slotkin tried responding to NurMuhammad’s question, around 40 Chinese students reportedly walked out, prompting a university staff member to inform the Democrat representative, who joined the event via a video link, about their exit. “We have a lot of the Chinese students exiting the room, congresswoman, just to let you know,” the staff member can be heard saying in a video shared with The Independent.

“I feel for you and I’m sorry that you’re going through that and I’m sorry that the students just felt the need to leave,” Slotkin said to NurMuhammad.

“There was audible booing and jeering from the Chinese students partway through her question, and during the answer, they started to get up and just walked out of the room," Pedro Fernandez, a Cornell University student who attended the event, told Axios.

Around 88 students reportedly signed an email that was sent to Cornell Institute of Public Affairs faculty members the following day, explaining that the walkout was due to the “extremely hostile” environment the talk’s Chinese attendees were put in. “At that moment, we were not sitting in a classroom; we were crucified in a courtroom for crimes that we did not commit,” they wrote.

Cornell Institute for Public Affairs Director Professor Matt Hall responded with a faculty-wide email, writing: “The human rights abuses of the Uyghur people are valuable points of discussion and critical to promoting open dialogue. At the same time, we must also respect that walkouts are a legitimate form of protest and an appropriate expression of disapproval.”

Following the incident, NurMuhammad told The Independent that the walkout brought about a “dehumanizing” experience. She claimed that the email Hall sent showed “they were trying to shift the focus of what happened. They have denied my existence, literally.”

“My brother has been arbitrarily for five years, my people are suffering genocide at the hands of the Chinese Communist Party,” NurMuhammad added. “When they walked out, the signal they gave me is that your personal suffering is not welcome to be shared in this space. They’re giving me this signal that you have to be silent. This stress and this worry has [sic] accumulated for too long.”

In a follow-up email, Hall and the Dean of the Cornell Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, Colleen Barry, said the events that transpired last week “spurred divisive discourse and engaged us in serious conversation related to how best to speak up in the face of genocide and human rights atrocities against the Uyghur people.”

“At the same time, they remind us how harmful it is when conversation devolves into derogatory anti-Asian expression,” the statement continued.

Cornell University staff reportedly reached out to NurMuhammad privately, but she noted that their response to the incident was unsatisfactory, and she wants them to publicly apologize.

“You’re talking about anti-Asian? What are you talking about? I’m Asian too. There is very little understanding of what I’m going through. I felt alone,” she said.

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by Anonymousreply 43March 17, 2022 7:12 AM

Uyghur please!

by Anonymousreply 1March 16, 2022 11:23 PM

Well Cornell responded making good points. The Chinese students abroad have been robotic brainwashed spineless cunts for decades now. Nothing really to see here. Fuck them. Take their money and let the have there baseless hissy fits.

by Anonymousreply 2March 16, 2022 11:38 PM

Why are there so many students from China in American universities? Isn’t there ideology superior? Surely their universities must be superior to ours, right?

by Anonymousreply 3March 16, 2022 11:42 PM

^their*

by Anonymousreply 4March 16, 2022 11:43 PM

The children of the rich who want western status symbols. Such as an Ivy diploma. The schools take them because MONEY.

by Anonymousreply 5March 16, 2022 11:44 PM

Treat them nicely. They are your future masters.

by Anonymousreply 6March 16, 2022 11:45 PM

The Chinese cunts are here to steal the technology or whatever they can. Don't trust them.

by Anonymousreply 7March 17, 2022 12:00 AM

The 40 Chinese students are not in the programme that hosted this event. Master in Public Administration. No way. They came from other departments and they were prepped and planning to do this. It's all scripted outrage for attention seeking and clicks. Dismal.

by Anonymousreply 8March 17, 2022 12:10 AM

Fun fact: the building pictured at OP had a busy tearoom in the 80s.

by Anonymousreply 9March 17, 2022 12:11 AM

You been here four year! Time for you to GO! Go take class in someplace else. Nobody like you here now!

by Anonymousreply 10March 17, 2022 12:18 AM

They can continue their walkout all the way out of the university, down to the airport and onto a plane back to China if they think its that shit hot.

Dont let the doorknob hit you way on the way out

by Anonymousreply 11March 17, 2022 12:24 AM

R11 they're just doing what they have to. They don't want to go back to China.

by Anonymousreply 12March 17, 2022 12:29 AM

Deport them all.

What are they even doing in this country?

We're still in a fucking pandemic. I thought our borders were closed?

by Anonymousreply 13March 17, 2022 12:35 AM

The Chinese are almost as sensitive as…

THE TRANS!

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by Anonymousreply 14March 17, 2022 12:44 AM

They are Chinese spies.

by Anonymousreply 15March 17, 2022 1:24 AM

They’re gonna piss in someone’s Coke.

by Anonymousreply 16March 17, 2022 1:26 AM

Fail their asses and send them back home.

by Anonymousreply 17March 17, 2022 1:28 AM

Operation Fox Hunt

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by Anonymousreply 18March 17, 2022 1:29 AM

I bet the students that walked out are the same type to enumerate the various massacres, crimes against humanity, and general corruption that the US was involved.

by Anonymousreply 19March 17, 2022 1:33 AM

Chinese students and trans need a safe space.

by Anonymousreply 20March 17, 2022 1:33 AM

"Cornell Institute for Public Affairs Director Professor Matt Hall responded with a faculty-wide email, writing: “The human rights abuses of the Uyghur people are valuable points of discussion and critical to promoting open dialogue. At the same time, we must also respect that walkouts are a legitimate form of protest and an appropriate expression of disapproval.”

I find this professor's statement gross and I am an alum. Sounds like: "Good people on both sides" to me. The walkout should have been condemned. Cornell failed to do that. They need to apologize.

by Anonymousreply 21March 17, 2022 1:34 AM

Nah, R21.

The professor is correct.

America wouldn't be America, if we dictate what protestors can and cannot protest.

It's why those people come to this country in the first place. So they can act like assholes.

Because we all know they couldn't get away with that shit in their own stinking country. And yet they come here to cheer on those restrictive, abusive and controlling policies.

Russians do the exact same thing when they move here.

Go figure.

by Anonymousreply 22March 17, 2022 1:37 AM

It's fiction. Anyone can go to Xinjiang. The UN's top human rights official is going there in May.

You should go there, too. Anytime.

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by Anonymousreply 23March 17, 2022 1:38 AM

Sinophobia all over the place. From people who've never even stepped foot in China.

by Anonymousreply 24March 17, 2022 1:39 AM

I'm surprised students for justice in palestine weren't there to disrupt it as well. . . as they have on other campuses.

by Anonymousreply 25March 17, 2022 1:41 AM

Wow, what a delicate flower—she feels alone, despite being catered to by the entire school administration.

She wants an apology?

Princess ain't getting one.

by Anonymousreply 26March 17, 2022 1:42 AM

[quote] Sinophobia all over the place. From people who've never even stepped foot in China

China people stepped all over the place.

More China people outside China than IN China.

by Anonymousreply 27March 17, 2022 1:44 AM

r22 the problem comes to how they choose to protest and the campus administrations that enable them... it's often quite hypocritical and just as often leads to ongoing harassment outside of said events.

sitll, I suppose we should applaud them for handling it without as much fuss, violence or property damage.

by Anonymousreply 28March 17, 2022 1:44 AM

r16 yerkillingme. bless you.

by Anonymousreply 29March 17, 2022 1:45 AM

R24 Acknowledging a genocide by the Chinese government does not equal hatred of Chinese people. Unless you have severely limited logic skills.

by Anonymousreply 30March 17, 2022 1:46 AM

I don’t understand why the protestors walked out.

Did they fear they would be misidentified as those who perpetrated/supported the genocide?

Did they think the genocide was just?

by Anonymousreply 31March 17, 2022 1:46 AM

[quote] Treat us nicely. We are your future masters.

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by Anonymousreply 32March 17, 2022 1:47 AM

Talking in front of them about the genocide perpetuated by their government was literal violence! The talk triggered and oppressed them.

by Anonymousreply 33March 17, 2022 1:48 AM

Condemning a civilization-state on the basis of a lie couched in sinophobia is sinophobic, r30.

Go to Xinjiang. Walk around. If you're vaccinated, anyone is welcome to come.

by Anonymousreply 34March 17, 2022 1:50 AM

Didn't Cornell refuse to close its (Chinese government-funded) Confucius Institute? Or did they finally give in? Either way, Cornell is one of the top destinations for Chinese students in the US.

Confucius Institutes exploded in American colleges and universities in the 2000's. They dramatically expanded Chinese language and culture course offerings at no cost to the schools that allowed them to set up shop. The instructors, teaching materials, everything was paid for by the Institutes. Only in the mid-2010's, when stories came to light about who, exactly, was funding these things did the US government take action. The Pentagon, which funds most language scholarships under its "strategic language" programs, finally required any school that received Pentagon funding could not also have a Confucius Institute.

by Anonymousreply 35March 17, 2022 1:53 AM

R34, it’s Xenophobia, not Sinophobia.

by Anonymousreply 36March 17, 2022 1:53 AM

Sino- = China-related. As in, Sino-American foreign policy?

by Anonymousreply 37March 17, 2022 1:58 AM

R36 "Sino" is the prefix for anything Chinese. Therefore, Sinophobia means hatred of Chinese people. There was no spelling mistake.

by Anonymousreply 38March 17, 2022 1:59 AM

People from Hong Kong, for instance, who now live outside China are not Sinophobic. Many have been targeted and surveilled for political reasons for years, and their fear and condemnation of the Chinese state is completely justified.

by Anonymousreply 39March 17, 2022 2:20 AM

[post redacted because linking to dailymail.co.uk clearly indicates that the poster is either a troll or an idiot (probably both, honestly.) Our advice is that you just ignore this poster but whatever you do, don't click on any link to this putrid rag.]

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by Anonymousreply 40March 17, 2022 5:44 AM

In one plot, Lin, who has been identified in the court filings as a member of the Chinese security apparatus, hired a private investigator to gather damaging information on a Tiananmen Square protest leader who continues to criticize the Chinese government. Although the court documents do not identify the victim, a person close to the investigation confirmed to the New York Times that Lin was targeting Xiong Yan.

Yan, a naturalized American citizen and military veteran, announced his candidacy for a U.S. House of Representatives seat from Long Island last fall. He was a student leader in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and in 2015 took part in pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

His alleged plotters are sought to have tried to discover any damaging information on his finances or private life, before trying to honeytrap him with prostitutes after finding he had no skeletons in his closet. Lin is even said to have called for Yan to be attacked or suffer a car crash in a bid to silence him.

Similarly, two suspects targeted Weiming Chen, a California-based artist who created a sculpture depicting Chinese President Xi Jinping as a COVID-19 molecule, and arranged to have hidden cameras and microphones installed in his studio, NBC News reported. Chen's sculpture, which was displayed in California, was destroyed in a fire last year.

by Anonymousreply 41March 17, 2022 5:45 AM

Other plots including stalking, harassment and attempting to obtain dissidents' personal information, such as copies of their passports and U.S. social security numbers.

The cases underscored what American officials have described as increasingly aggressive efforts by the Chinese government to seek out, silence and threaten pro-democracy activists abroad.

In addition to Xiong and Chen, the alleged spies also targeted San Francisco Bay area lawyer and political activist Arthur Liu, whose 16-year-old daughter Alysa Liu was an American Olympic figure skater.

Liu allegedly hired former Florida corrections officer Matthew Ziburis to spy on Arthur and obtain copies of his passport and social security number.

According to court documents, Ziburis discouraged Liu's idea of bribing an IRS employee to obtain that information, writing to his Chinese handler: 'Boss has to realize that this isn't China where there is far more corruption than in the U.S.'

Arthur told NBC he has been a victim of Chinese schemes since at least the 1990s. The attorney claims a student was sent to spy on him but ultimately confessed to the assignment after Arthur took him into his him and helped him find work

'They are still paying attention to me after 30-some years, since I organized protests and hunger strikes for democracy in China,' he said. 'I'm a little bit surprised that after all this time, they're still keeping track of me.'

Meanwhile, AG Olsen argued that there has been an alarming rise in efforts by Chinese officials to intimidate critics in the U.S.

by Anonymousreply 42March 17, 2022 5:47 AM

Why do we allow people like those at R41 and R42 into our country?

They should be banned, as terrorists.

by Anonymousreply 43March 17, 2022 7:12 AM
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