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Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher spark online backlash against Chinese universities
Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher spark online backlash against Chinese universities

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • South China Morning Post

Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher spark online backlash against Chinese universities

Some Chinese universities appear to have distanced themselves from a US researcher invited to their events, after social media users in China took aim at his past remarks on Xinjiang and demanded an explanation from the institutes. The latest in the line of fire is Central South University in Changsha, Hunan province. It has faced a barrage of online criticism since last Tuesday for having hosted Darius Longarino, who is a research scholar at Yale Law School and senior fellow at its Paul Tsai China Centre – a think tank that conducts China-related exchange activities and research. Longarino, who has criticised China's policies in its western Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in the past, was invited by the university in June to deliver a lecture on sexual harassment cases in Chinese courts. Central South University, along with at least two others that had invited Longarino for events in recent months have since taken down posts about those events from their websites. Chinese search engines still display links to the pages, but clicking on them results in an error message indicating they are inaccessible. Darius Longarino's research focuses mainly on legal issues relating to gender equality and the rights of sexual minorities in China. Photo: LinkedIn/Darius Longarino The controversy snowballed after some social media users highlighted Longarino's posts on X (formerly Twitter) from 2019 to 2022, where he criticised Beijing's Xinjiang policies, including those affecting the rights of sexual and gender minorities.

Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher put Chinese universities in line of online fire
Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher put Chinese universities in line of online fire

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • South China Morning Post

Xinjiang posts by Yale researcher put Chinese universities in line of online fire

Some Chinese universities appear to have distanced themselves from a US researcher invited to their events, after social media users in China took aim at his past remarks on Xinjiang and demanded an explanation from the institutes. The latest in the line of fire is Central South University in Changsha, Hunan province. It has faced a barrage of online criticism since last Tuesday for having hosted Darius Longarino, who is a research scholar at Yale Law School and senior fellow at its Paul Tsai China Centre – a think tank that conducts China-related exchange activities and research. Longarino, who has criticised China's policies in its western Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in the past, was invited by the university in June to deliver a lecture on sexual harassment cases in Chinese courts. Central South University, along with at least two others that had invited Longarino for events in recent months have since taken down posts about those events from their websites. Chinese search engines still display links to the pages, but clicking on them results in an error message indicating they are inaccessible. Darius Longarino's research focuses mainly on legal issues relating to gender equality and the rights of sexual minorities in China. Photo: LinkedIn/Darius Longarino The controversy snowballed after some social media users highlighted Longarino's posts on X (formerly Twitter) from 2019 to 2022, where he criticised Beijing's Xinjiang policies, including those affecting the rights of sexual and gender minorities.

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