Friday, April 4, 2025

China aims to optimise spread of Confucius Institutes

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BEIJING: China plans to “optimise” the spread of its controversial Confucius Institutes, the government said, institutions to promote Chinese language and culture that have been criticised by some for spreading Communist Party influence.
In 2004, China began setting up the government-run bodies, whose stated mission is to satisfy soaring global demand to learn Chinese.
But they have drawn criticism, especially in the United States, for being little more than a propaganda arm of the ruling Communist Party, assertions denied by both the institutes and the government.The Confucius Institute will remain a key government policy, a document on modernising China’s education system issued late on Saturday (Feb 23) by the party’s Central Committee and the Cabinet showed.”Optimise the regional distribution of the Confucius Institute, strengthen its abilities and building, and fully raise its educational standards,” they said in the statement, released by the official Xinhua news agency late on Saturday. “Strengthen work on the teaching of Chinese internationally,” they added, without giving details.
Such broad statements are typically followed weeks or even months later by more detailed policy documents that focus on implementation.Some US legislators, including Florida Senator Macro Rubio, have been critical of the more than 100 Confucius Institutes hosted at universities across the United States, calling them a vehicle of Chinese influence on international higher education.
Some major US colleges, including Pennsylvania State University and the University of Chicago, have cut ties with the institute after professors complained its programmes were Chinese propaganda wrapped in culture and language education.
The document added that China would improve educational opportunities for students from countries in the Belt and Road initiative, speeding up the grooming of international talent and helping foreign students return home to better job prospects.
China opened its first so-called Silk Road School last year in Suzhou in the eastern province of Jiangsu. About 100 students from countries in the initiative received scholarships as they study China’s economy, politics, law and culture. (Reuters)

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