A speech by China’s ambassador to the United States on Saturday was disrupted by activists and students opposed to the communist regime’s human rights abuses.
During the speech at the Harvard Kennedy School’s China Conference, the ambassador, Xie Feng, found his opening remarks repeatedly derailed as protesters stood up to denounce the regime’s repression in Xinjiang, Tibet, and Hong Kong. Demonstrators also criticized the regime’s aggression toward Taiwan, a self-ruled island that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) views as its territory.
A female student, holding a small banner saying “China Lie,” accused Mr. Xie of painting a “delusion of a prosperous China” when Hong Kong’s freedom was eroded by the communist regime.
The Taiwanese student was quickly escorted out by a man in a dark suit.
“You have blood on your hands. Guilty of genocide,” she yelled. The student was ushered out by security guards.
Mr. Xie remained silent throughout the disruption which lasted lasted about two minutes.
According to a summary of Mr. Xie’s remarks, published by China’s embassy in the United States, the diplomat urged the United States to work with China to “push bilateral relations to the track of stable, healthy, and sustainable growth.”
Mr. Xie also warned Washington not to interfere in what Beijing deems to be its internal affairs. If Washington continues to pressure China over Taiwan, Hong Kong, Xinjiang, Tibet, and the South China Sea, “no ‘guardrail’ can stop the bilateral relationship from reaching rock bottom,” Mr. Xie said at the event.
Six students and activists interjected during Mr. Xie’s speech, according to Students for a Free Tibet, a group that campaigns for Tibetans’ political freedom.
The organization said protesters wanted people to know that the regime’s ambassador “was not welcome on campus.”
“You are a representative of a government that advocates for genocide. The genocide of the Tibetan people, of the Uyghur people, the occupation of Hong Kong,” the activist said.
Campus Protests
Outside the Littauer Center, where Mr. Xie delivered the speech, dozens of people held banners and flags in the rain, calling for an end to human rights abuses in China.“We’re here to protest the conditions in China, the way they treat people, [and] the persecution of so many groups: the Falun Gong, the Uyghurs, the Tibetans, and the underground Christians,” Michael Tseng, wearing a yellow raincoat, told The Epoch Times.
Falun Gong practitioners held aloft placards bearing messages such as “End Transplant Tourism in China” and “Stop Genocide in China.”
Some activists were protesting against the CCP’s tightening grip over Hong Kong.
“Free Hong Kong,” Che Chungchi, one of the demonstrators outside the meeting hall, told The Epoch Times, calling for the release of “every political prisoner” in Hong Kong and the mainland.