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Hong Kong University president Zhang Xiang speaks to students during a forum in July. Zhang has dodged the demands of students and staff in a recent petition. Photo: Winson Wong

Hong Kong University president Zhang Xiang dodges student ‘ultimatum’ to condemn police brutality in city’s ongoing unrest

  • He was responding to a petition signed by more than 2,600 students, staff and alumni last week, requesting he meet four demands by October 28
  • But he instead urged all parties to have a peaceful and rational exchange of views, causing the petitioners to consider further action
The head of the University of Hong Kong has dodged student and staff demands to condemn alleged police brutality in the ongoing anti-government protests by instead voicing his opposition to “any form of violence by any party”.

Responding to a petition signed by more than 2,600 students, staff and alumni last week, HKU president Zhang Xiang on Monday avoided making any statement about the police force and instead called for a peaceful resolution to the city’s unrest.

“We urgently need an exchange of views in a peaceful and rational manner and HKU must be able to serve this purpose,” he said.

“Most important of all, I care about the safety and well-being of our students and it is our moral obligation and pastoral care role to understand and help them.”

A police officer aims during an anti-government protest march in Hong Kong on October 20. Photo: Kim Kyung-Hoon

The petition set a deadline of October 28 for Zhang to respond to four demands: for the president to issue a statement to condemn “police brutality”, provide concrete assistance to arrested students, hold a forum to listen to students’ concerns, and promise not to permit police searches on campus.

Submitted last Tuesday by a group of about 100 students and alumni to HKU’s vice-president Ian Holliday, the petition put forward an “ultimatum for university management and president Zhang Xiang”, or actions might escalate.

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Students described Zhang’s letter as “unsatisfactory, ambiguous and redundant”, and set a new deadline of Thursday night for him to further respond, or else actions might escalate on Friday.

An HKU student who organised the petition criticised Zhang for “ignoring all four demands” in his letter. He said the university chief, by choosing to respond only via email and not in person, was “turning a blind eye” to students.

The exchanges between Zhang and the students followed a move by Chinese University president Rocky Tuan Sung-chi who, after facing pressure from students at an open dialogue on October 10, said in an open letter earlier this month that he would condemn police for “any proven case” of brutality – the first varsity head to do so.

Tuan’s letter drew criticism from police groups and former chief executive Leung Chun-ying, all of them slamming it for “setting a bad precedent”.

Over 100 students gathered and presented a hand a petition letter with over 2,600 signatures from students, alumni and teachers to HKU vice-president Ian Holliday last week. Photo: Chan Ho-him

The heads of eight university councils – including HKU and Chinese University – also responded by saying campuses were not “battlegrounds for the resolution of political issues”, and should not be drawn into supporting any particular position.

Zhang insisted in his letter that he and the HKU senior management had met students involved in the protests, reached out to some of their parents, and already explained the school’s “principles and practice” about police entering university property.

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School management held discussions with students “at various occasions in different manners” and will continue to do so, he wrote in his letter.

“The SMT [senior management team] and I believe that ongoing engagement with students is very important.”

HKU president Zhang Xiang held a forum with students and alumni in July. He has dodged the demands of students in a recent petition. Photo: Winson Wong

Zhang previously met students in a forum in July amid questions over his statement condemning “destructive acts” by protesters who stormed the Legislative Council complex on July 1. He said he was “against all kinds of violence” at the July forum.

Other university heads have also shied away from explicitly condemning police brutality, despite the Chinese University president’s position. Some told the Post last week they would instead “condemn violence in any form”, while others dodged the question or did not reply.
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