The University of Alabama (UA) has been asked by the Department of Education (ED) to provide records of any contracts, gifts, or donation agreements it may have had with dozens of China-funded companies and institutions listed by the department.
The department wants “true copies of each gift or donation agreement, contract, and/or conditional gift or donation agreement” the university had, if any, with the companies or institutions listed—within 30 days.
Companies such as Huawei Technologies Co. were listed in the letter, as well as a number of China-based universities such as Chengdu Technological University and Jilin University.
The letter from Reed Rubinstein, the principal deputy general counsel, also states, “It appears that UA has failed to report an alleged partnership with the Wuhan Institute of Virology (“WIV”), in Wuhan, China.”
The university denies such a partnership exists and says it has alerted the department.
“The UA reference on the Wuhan Institute of Virology website was brought to our attention earlier this year. At that time, we reviewed any possible related institutional records to determine the basis for the reference,” the University of Alabama told The Epoch Times in a Dec. 23 email.
“We found no ties or connection between UA and WIV, and no reason for UA to be listed on the website.
“University officials reached out to WVI to question the reference and requested the UA reference on the website be removed, but never received a response. We have relayed this information to the Department of Education.”
“The threat is real, so we took action to make sure the public is afforded the transparency the law requires,” DeVos said at the time. “We found pervasive noncompliance by higher-ed institutions and significant foreign entanglement with America’s colleges and universities.”
The vast majority of the foreign funds went to America’s largest and most prestigious universities, which have received billions of dollars through a bevy of intermediaries, according to a report released by the ED on Oct. 20.