University of Cambridge: Close Relationship with Huawei Discovered: British Brain Drain

University of Cambridge: Close Relationship with Huawei Discovered: British Brain Drain

-“British lawmakers ask for investigation”-

Speaker of the British Parliament:

Relations between Britain and China are sharpening.

The Speaker of the British Parliament has announced a policy to ban China’s Ambassador to the United Kingdom, Zheng Zeguang, from entering and leaving the parliament.

Chinese Ambassador to the United Kingdom Zheng Zeguang:

Chinese Ambassador Chung on September 15th

He was scheduled to attend a meeting of a pro-Chinese bipartisan group in the British Parliament.

However, some lawmakers voiced protests.

The chairs of both the House and Senate have decided to ban entry and exit.

Cambridge University Institute:

“The intimate relationship between the University of Cambridge Institute and Huawei in China” was discovered.

The danger of British brain drain has been advocated.

“The Epoch Times” (September 16th):

Several researchers belonging to the Research Center (CCCM) of the University of Cambridge, England.

It turned out that it has a connection with Huawei, a Chinese telecommunications equipment.

British lawmakers urged the government to immediately investigate its dependence on Chinese funds, such as universities.

The Times (September 13th):

CCCM launched in Shenzhen in 2018.

CCCM representative Hu Yi Ping
Former Senior Vice President of Huawei
He is eligible for a special allowance from the State Council of China.

Special allowance of the State Council of China:

This special allowance is provided to experts who are highly valued by the Chinese government.

With this, it became clear that “the representative of CCCM is a person linked to the Chinese government.”

As Britain, you can’t miss it.

UK Top 20 Universities:

In recent years, the top 20 universities in the UK have
From Huawei and Chinese state-owned enterprises
It is said to have received 40 million pounds (6 billion yen).

In 2018, Oxford University announced that it would no longer receive funding from Huawei.

Iain Duncan Smith
Former British Conservative leader:

“British universities have relied too much on funding from China in recent years,” he said on the 12th.

The British government said it should urgently investigate the dependence of institutions and businesses on China.

He added, “The case at Cambridge University is particularly bad.”

World view of Toshiyoshi Katsumata

http://hisayoshi-katsumata-worldview.com/archives/27433096.html

Cambridge University Business School Has Links to China’s Huawei: Report

A top business school at the University of Cambridge

has close ties with Chinese technology giant Huawei, with three out of five board members linked with the company,

a U.K. newspaper reported on Monday.

Three out of four directors at the Cambridge Centre for Chinese Management (CCCM)

have ties with Huawei, while its chief representative is a former Huawei senior vice president paid by the Chinese government, the Times newspaper reported on Monday.

Johnny Patterson,
policy director of the U.K.-based rights group Hong Kong Watch

called on the university to examine Huawei’s relationship with the CCCM, the report said.

The paper quoted former Conservative Party leader Ian Duncan Smith as saying that Cambridge was “one of the worst offenders” when it came to reliance on Chinese funding.

Duncan Smith
said companies and universities in the U.K. had grown “far too dependent” on money from China.

“The government needs to urgently set up an inquiry into the UK’s dependency on China across a range of institutions and companies,” the Times quoted him as saying.

The CCCM is part of Cambridge University’s Judge Business School, and calls

itself “an academic research institute
dedicated to the study of the management practices and strategies of Chinese enterprises.”

A cached version of its website described former Huawei senior vice president Hu Yanping as its chief representative in China.

Radio Free Asia

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/china/huawei-cambridge-09142021084321.html