icon bookmark-bicon bookmarkicon cameraicon checkicon chevron downicon chevron lefticon chevron righticon chevron upicon closeicon v-compressicon downloadicon editicon v-expandicon fbicon fileicon filtericon flag ruicon full chevron downicon full chevron lefticon full chevron righticon full chevron upicon gpicon insicon mailicon moveicon-musicicon mutedicon nomutedicon okicon v-pauseicon v-playicon searchicon shareicon sign inicon sign upicon stepbackicon stepforicon swipe downicon tagicon tagsicon tgicon trashicon twicon vkicon yticon wticon fm
30 Mar, 2015 12:15

​‘Propaganda’: Chinese-funded Mandarin lessons in UK schools ‘whitewash’ human rights

​‘Propaganda’: Chinese-funded Mandarin lessons in UK schools ‘whitewash’ human rights

Chinese propaganda is infiltrating British primary and secondary schools under the guise of government-funded Mandarin lessons, a report by campaigners alleges.

The Chinese government provides hundreds of thousands of pounds and more than 90 teachers to schools across the UK as part of a Chinese-language teaching project.

An investigation by campaign group Free Tibet found that British educational institutions are hosting so-called Confucius Classrooms without prior discussion of their content.

Critics argue the language classes present students with a “whitewashed” view of China’s government and human rights record.

Freedom of Information (FoI) requests revealed that in 37 out of 95 schools, governors have not been critical of Confucius Classrooms before approving their activity in the school.

Out of 80 FoI requests, Free Tibet discovered only one single school governor had raised concerns about the program during a meeting.

READ MORE: China meets London: UK starts first yuan money-market fund

One FoI request revealed China currently injects $10,000 annually into cash-strapped British schools after Confucius Classrooms’ budget and plan have been rubber stamped by the project’s headquarters in Beijing.

In addition to paying the salaries of Mandarin teachers, The Confucius Institute – also known as Hanban – pays for teaching resources and even subsidizes school trips to China.

Hanban offered a total 9,000 Chinese courses for 260,000 students around the world in 2009.

The program says it is meeting the “sharp increase” in global demand for Mandarin lessons, while also promoting Chinese culture abroad.

Critics argue it also plays a part in Chinese soft power, seeking to alter Western attitudes to a country which is notoriously strict on censorship and freedom of speech.

Li Changchun, a retired senior government official and Politburo member, described it “an important part of China’s overseas propaganda set-up,” according to the Economist.

Mandarin teachers, who are recruited from the Hanban headquarters in Beijing, are vetted by the Ministry of Chinese Education before being dispatched abroad.

According to Free Tibet, “They are obliged to support the positions and policies of the Chinese government.

Hanban teachers present students with an exclusively positive view of China and prevent them learning about the lives of Chinese people in an authoritarian state and about wider issues such as democracy, human rights, Hong Kong and Tibet,” the group said.

READ MORE: Rising China arms exports threaten US influence worldwide – report

Free Tibet has sent a dossier to Confucius Classroom schools in the UK which outlines the “risks” associated with hosting the Mandarin teachers.

The organization asks schools to demonstrate how they are offering a balanced education which does not lead to a “whitewash” of the government’s human rights record in China and Tibet.

However well-intentioned [schools] may be in hosting Confucius Classrooms, they must understand that China’s authoritarian government is seeking to control what British children learn about China,” Free Tibet Director Eleanor Byrne-Rosengren said.

Councils and governors seem to have nodded through the Confucius Classroom program with their eyes closed. We hope teachers have been more vigilant and are already providing balance in the education their pupils receive about China, but there’s an urgent need for local and national debates about the place China has been given in the education of our children.”

The UCL Institute of Education, which hosts the Confucius Institute for England, said it is still considering a number of FoI requests from Free Tibet and could not comment on the concerns until the requests have been resolved.

Schools employ and fund teachers of Mandarin Chinese on the same terms as their other language teaching staff,” the institute said.

Podcasts
0:00
23:13
0:00
25:0