House Panel Chair Calls on Columbia University to Cut Ties With CCP-Linked Group
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The top Republican on the House China committee is urging Columbia University to end its ties and those of its student groups with an organization he says advances the interests of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
More specifically, Chinese entities such as CUSEF operate “under the auspices” of Beijing’s United Front Work Department to “suppress speech and activity” deemed taboo by the CCP, Moolenaar added, including topics related to China’s human rights violations against Uyghurs, Tibetans, and Falun Gong practitioners.
The founder of CUSEF, Tung Chee-hwa, served on the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), a political advisory body, from 2005 to 2023. According to the letter, CPPCC is “a key United Front forum designed to advance CCP objectives in and beyond the PRC through overt and covert political mobilization.”
Given CUSEF’s ties to the CCP, Moolenaar found it concerning that Columbia University is offering an exchange trip co-sponsored by the organization in January next year, which covers participants’ transportation, board, and lodging expenses. The trip, he added, is being promoted under the name “China Trek” by Greater China Initiative (GCI), a student organization affiliated with Columbia University’s Weatherhead East Asian Institute.
Moolenaar said the fact that the exchange program was organized by a student group “raises serious questions about the university’s policies on student group recognition, and particularly its regulations on foreign funding for recognized student organizations.”
“Columbia should not recognize or promote student groups that accept foreign funding or form partnerships with a foreign agent known to be engaging in malign influence operations,” Moolenaar wrote.
CUSEF has courted universities across the United States, but not all of them have accepted its funding, Moolenaar wrote, naming the University of Texas at Austin as one of the institutions that have made the “exemplary decision” to reject it.
Citing academic integrity, Moolenaar called on Columbia University to “immediately terminate any ties that the university or its student groups have with CUSEF.”
Additionally, Columbia should undertake a thorough evaluation of the foreign funding sources and partnerships of student organizations in the future, he added.
“At a minimum, such a vetting process should exclude accepting funding and partnerships with organizations like CUSEF that exist to promote the CCP’s narratives and interests—which have proven antithetical to academic freedom and free exchange of ideas—and to help the CCP identify foreigners who the party could exploit,” Moolenaar concluded.
Columbia University didn’t respond to an inquiry from The Epoch Times.
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