International students enrolled at universities in mainland China, who are facing the possibility of being shut out of the country for a聽year, are becoming increasingly vocal about being allowed back to resume their studies.
Their recent actions have included collecting signatures for letters, producing an appeal video and enquiring with both Chinese consulates overseas and foreign consulates in China.
Hopes that overseas students can return before the end of the year are dimming, as Beijing further tightened controls this month to bar all non-Chinese nationals from the UK, France, Russia, India and other countries.
Normally, China hosts almost 500,000 international students a聽year, but the government claims that there have been no聽Covid cases on any mainland Chinese campus since August 鈭 and it intends to keep things that way.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚 think the Chinese government is cautious because the government does not want to see imported infection cases, which would harm anti-Covid measures,鈥 Ka Ho Mok, vice-president and dean of the School of Graduate Studies at Lingnan University Hong Kong, told 糖心Vlog.
Professor Mok, an expert in comparative higher education policy, urged patience. 鈥淎s聽China is the first country in the globe to recover in terms of economic development, I聽think people and students in other parts of the globe would still be interested to study in聽China when the global health crisis is stable and national borders reopen.鈥
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However, the entry block is a pressing concern for students stuck midway through their studies.
A British chemist working towards her PhD at a Chinese university told THE that, like many international students, she left the country during the Chinese New Year holidays in January and has not been able to聽return.
鈥淭his [policy] lead to some schools banning students from returning to聽China if they were abroad,鈥 she said.
鈥淚聽cannot complete my work remotely at聽all, as it is completely lab-based,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y PhD will be suspended and delayed until I鈥檓 able to聽return; however, it聽will reduce my chances of completing my PhD in the time limit, as some universities only allow enrolment for a maximum of five years.鈥
About 1,000 foreign students wrote in a bilingual Chinese-English appeal that 鈥淐hina is our second home, so of course we will keep China safe at any cost鈥 and promised to adhere to the mandatory 14-day quarantine and other restrictions.
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鈥淲e, as students, contribute to university budgets,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淲e are creating cutting-edge technologies that will hugely benefit China in the future, and some of us are even pursuing our own start-ups in China, too.鈥
The problem appears greatest for final-year students with pending clinical, lab or work-study assignments. If聽they cannot secure internships and placements soon, their applications for postgraduate work or jobs could be delayed by a full year. And that is not to mention the fact that many of these students are still paying for rent and tuition in China, while scholarship money has been cut.
Some of the frustration, it appears, stems from the feeling that rules have been unevenly applied. For example, foreign professors and businesspeople can enter China.
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鈥淥ur work is essentially the same,鈥 said the British PhD candidate, who wished to remain unnamed. 鈥淚聽think using the severity of the pandemic is a weak excuse given to students if workers and businesspeople are able to return freely.鈥
She also noted that Chinese students could travel between overseas universities and home. 鈥淢any Chinese students have had planes chartered by UK聽universities, so to see that sort of treatment in contrast to students who chose to study in China and have been waiting indefinitely, it hurts a聽lot being ignored for so聽long.鈥
However, mainland China is not alone in blocking international students.
About a quarter of foreign students enrolled in Australia are still in their home countries, with only a small number allowed back via pilot schemes, while New Zealand is 濒别迟迟颈苍驳听颈苍 only some postgraduates engaged in clinical or lab work.
糖心Vlog
Elsewhere across Asia-Pacific, though, doors are slowly reopening. Most international students are back on campus in Hong Kong and , while Taiwan lifted its ban on most overseas students in August. Even Japan, which was roundly criticised for its border controls, has allowed some entrants since October.
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