• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • HOME
  • ABOUT CHINA
    • NEWS
    • TESTIMONIES
    • OP-EDS
    • FEATURED
    • GLOSSARY
    • CHINA PERSECUTION MAP
  • FROM THE WORLD
    • NEWS GLOBAL
    • TESTIMONIES GLOBAL
    • OP-EDS GLOBAL
    • FEATURED GLOBAL
  • INTERVIEWS
  • DOCUMENTS AND TRANSLATIONS
    • DOCUMENTS
    • THE TAI JI MEN CASE
    • TRANSLATIONS
    • EVENTS
  • ABOUT
  • EDITORIAL BOARD
  • TOPICS

Bitter Winter

A magazine on religious liberty and human rights

three friends of winter
Home / China / Featured China

UK: Sunak In, Confucius Institutes Out?

10/28/2022Ruth Ingram |

The new British Prime Minister has promised to disband the country’s Confucius Institutes, a tool of Beijing’s propaganda.

by Ruth Ingram

The booth of the Oxford Brookes University Confucius Institute at Fresher’s Fair. From Twitter.
The booth of the Oxford Brookes University Confucius Institute at Fresher’s Fair. From Twitter.

The murky depths that Beijing will go to push pro-CCP propaganda and stifle dissent overseas have been plumbed in a new report on Confucius Institutes in the UK.

Far from being the once assumed “soft power” initiative to promote Chinese culture and language within the UK, their purpose as a direct and lavishly funded propaganda arm of the CCP has been uncovered in revelations by the Asia Studies Centre of the Henry Jackson Society.

Not only has Beijing ploughed a staggering £33,426,300 into the UK institutes, with another ten million or so unaccounted for, but has filled them with around 250 majority Han Chinese loyalist staff who have pledged allegiance to the regime, and are determined to peddle Beijing’s agenda into British life and business.

Governments have been slow to wake up to the pernicious influence of the more than 550 Confucius Institutes scattered around the world, despite myriad studies proving their “incompatibility” with democratic societies, particularly in the academic field.

Despite being described in 2014 as “academic malware” by the University of Chicago’s Professor Marshal Sahlins, who advocated their closure, and as “China’s Trojan Horse” by the Heritage Foundation, the UK’s honeymoon continued regardless, and by the time of Xi’s visit in 2015, 27 centers had opened throughout the country.

Not until 2019 were the 30 establishments, operating under the umbrella of prestigious universities, with tentacles permeating 100 schools, politics, academia and business interests, investigated by the Conservative Party Human Rights Commission, and proven wanting.

Publicity for the Confucius Institute at the University of Hull. From Twitter.
Publicity for the Confucius Institute at the University of Hull. From Twitter.

Operating under the auspices of the recently M15-flagged up “United Front Work Department” set up to specifically advance the CCP’s influence abroad, and to leach vital technological expertise from the UK, their task is to ensure a veil is drawn over PRC activities.

The report slammed as “intolerable” UK government actions in allowing an institution devoted to eradicating democracy, and dumbing down the oppression taking place within its own borders, to exist within its own corridors of academic enquiry.

The Government must wake up to CCP tactics to inveigle itself within the fabric of the UK, say the authors of the report, and not take at face value attempts to rebrand the Confucius Institutes as innocent educational establishments.

Far from being the guileless cultural promoters they claim to be, the report alerts decision makers and policy readers to their malign influence and recommends a thorough overhaul of Confucius Institutes practices regarding free speech, their staff recruitment, transparency over funding and its purposes, and their relationship with the Chinese Communist Party.

Long-standing over-reliance on Beijing for Chinese language acquisition must be stemmed and other avenues, particularly Taiwan, should be explored, say the authors.

More attention should be paid to pro-China political statements made by Institutes, particularly those responding negatively to pro-democracy activism in the West. Citing the case of an instructor hired by the Confucius Institute at McMaster University in Canada, who was compelled to sign away her right to practice Falun Gong, and whose case later resulted in the closure of that institute at McMaster, the report advocated more protection for overseas Chinese citizens who dare to speak out.

Universities should beware the conflict of interests in inviting Confucius Institutes personnel to teach on contemporary China and the consequent threat to deeper understanding of Middle Kingdom politics, human rights, social problems, ethnic relations and territorial claims to areas such as Hong Kong, Taiwan, Tibet and Xinjiang. In that vein, naively embarking on collaborations that even benefit Beijing militarily must be terminated.

A “Model Confucius Institute” operates in the University of Manchester. From Twitter.
A “Model Confucius Institute” operates in the University of Manchester. From Twitter.

If the Institutes are allowed to continue, those in partnership with them must realize the opposing world views held by each of the countries, observe the authors.

“Regardless of how effectively they uphold these principles, British universities are committed to free enquiry, freedom of speech, equality and freedom from discrimination, honest teaching, and the pursuit of knowledge,” they say.

In contrast, “regardless of how often it claims to pursue the greater good, the CCP jails the enquiring, suppresses speech, destroys ethnic minorities and political dissidents, lies to its people, and spreads disinformation at home and abroad.”

Confucius Institutes should have never seen the light of day twenty years ago, was the damning verdict of the report. “But this was never a partnership of equals,” it concludes. “Instead, it is the kind of combination that poses a fundamental threat to one of Britain’s most important institutions.”

Legislation is underway in the U.K. to enable Confucius Institutes’ partnerships to be disentangled, in the form of an amendment to the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Bill, but its implementation would be arbitrary.

Instead, a more permanent solution might be on the table in the form of a vow made by the UK’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, who promised in his leadership bid, to disband the country’s Confucius Institutes.

Having branded China the “number one threat” to domestic and global security, Sunak vowed to “kick the CCP out of our universities.”

“Enough is enough. For too long, politicians in Britain and across the West have rolled out the red carpet and turned a blind eye to China’s nefarious activity and ambitions.” “I will change this on Day 1 as PM,” he promised.

The report’s authors might have an ally waiting in the wings. The days of Beijing’s influence through its Confucius Institute mouthpiece in the UK might yet be numbered.

Tagged With: Communist Propaganda, Confucianism, United Kingdom

bw-profile
Ruth Ingram

Ruth Ingram is a researcher who has written extensively for the Central Asia-Caucasus publication, Institute of War and Peace Reporting, the Guardian Weekly newspaper, The Diplomat, and other publications.

Related articles

  • China’s New Directives on Law Schools: They Should Teach that Separation of Powers Is Wrong

    China’s New Directives on Law Schools: They Should Teach that Separation of Powers Is Wrong

  • Burning Effigies: China Threatens American Academic Miles Yu

    Burning Effigies: China Threatens American Academic Miles Yu

  • Scientology Churches Are Tax-Exempt Religious Buildings, UK Court Says

    Scientology Churches Are Tax-Exempt Religious Buildings, UK Court Says

  • Zhangzhung: How China Reinvents Ancient Tibetan History

    Zhangzhung: How China Reinvents Ancient Tibetan History

Keep Reading

  • La campagne contre l’Église de l’Unification au Japon : L’ombre du parti communiste
    La campagne contre l’Église de l’Unification au Japon : L’ombre du parti communiste

    Un reportage explosif affirme que les communistes japonais ont joué un rôle-clé en alimentant l’hostilité contre le groupe religieux anticommuniste.

  • United Nations: “One Million Tibetan Children Forcibly Separated From Their Parents”
    United Nations: “One Million Tibetan Children Forcibly Separated From Their Parents”

    In November, three UN Special Rapporteurs wrote to China. There has been no satisfactory answer, and they have decided to go public.

  • Partidos comunistas y religión: la “guerra final” del Partido Comunista Japonés contra la Iglesia de la Unificación
    Partidos comunistas y religión: la “guerra final” del Partido Comunista Japonés contra la Iglesia de la Unificación

    Los partidos comunistas en los países democráticos tienen una forma tortuosa de atacar a las religiones. Lo que está sucediendo en Japón es solo el capítulo más reciente de una larga historia.

  • The Digital China 2023 Plan: Is There Something New?
    The Digital China 2023 Plan: Is There Something New?

    The document reiterates a strategy Xi Jinping is pursuing since before he came to national power. What is new (and alarming) is the propaganda.

Primary Sidebar

Support Bitter Winter

Learn More

Follow us

Newsletter

Most Read

  • Cultural Genocide: The Indoctrination of Uyghur Children by Gulfiye Y
  • Wenzhou, Parents Asked to Sign a “Kindergarten Family Commitment Not to Believe in Religion” by He Yuyan
  • Why “Cults” (and “Brainwashing”) Do Not Exist by Massimo Introvigne
  • Pakistan: Ahmadi Mosque Vandalized by Police During Ramadan by Marco Respinti
  • A Uyghur View: Putin Got His Arrest Warrant—Xi Jinping Should Be Next by Kok Bayraq
  • Thailand and Pakistan: No Friends of Uyghur Refugees by Marco Respinti
  • “Do Not Dissolve the Unification Church!” 1. An Award-Winning Journalist Speaks Out by Masumi Fukuda

CHINA PERSECUTION MAP -SEARCH NEWS BY REGION

clickable geographical map of china, with regions

Footer

EDITORIAL BOARD

Editor-in-Chief

MASSIMO INTROVIGNE

Director-in-Charge

MARCO RESPINTI

ADDRESS

CESNUR

Via Confienza 19,

10121 Turin, Italy,

Phone: 39-011-541950

E-MAIL

We welcome submission of unpublished contributions, news, and photographs. Each submission implies the authorization for us to edit and publish texts and photographs. We reserve the right to decide which submissions are suitable for publication. Please, write to INFO@BITTERWINTER.ORG Thank you.

Newsletter

LINKS

orlir-logo hrwf-logo cesnur-logo

Copyright © 2023 · Bitter Winter · PRIVACY POLICY· COOKIE POLICY