
On Saturday, April 20, Cosette Wu disrupted a talk by the Chinese ambassador to the United States, Xie Feng, at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.
âYou robbed Hong Kongers of the most fundamental freedoms and devastated their democracy,â Wu, then a Harvard junior, shouted from the audience, according to videos of the disruption that went viral on social media. âNow, in my country Taiwan, you sought to do the same.â
In a year of unruly protests on Harvardâs campus, which included the occupation of a major building, the assault of an Israeli graduate student, and a three-week-long encampment that featured calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, Wuâs heckling of a Communist apparatchik, and the rhetoric she employed, were comparatively tame.
That made it all the more shocking when a Harvard student from mainland China grabbed Wu and, in an incident that the universityâs police department logged as an assault, forcibly dragged her from the event.
The student was Hongji Zou, a masterâs candidate in Harvardâs Graduate School of Education and an officer in Harvardâs chapter of the Chinese Students and Scholars Associationâa group overseen by the Chinese Communist Party. Twisting Wuâs arm and pulling her into the aisle, Zou, who had helped to organize Xieâs talk, shoved the struggling protester past the stage and out of the room. There, he was stopped by a security guard who pried the younger female student from his grip, footage of the incident shows.
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The case sparked outrage on social media and led to an investigation by the House Select Committee on the CCP, which demanded to know what sanctions, if any, Harvard had imposed on the students involved.
It would be hard to imagine a simpler case for a fair-minded disciplinary board. Wuâs protest had technically violated Harvardâs rules on free speech, which prohibit conduct that drowns out speakers or inhibits their ability to speak. But those rules have often gone unenforced at Harvard, particularly after the Oct. 7 attacks, including against disruptions that were more more serious than Wuâs.
Just last week, the university told students that they would be allowed to disrupt a talk by Mosab Youssefâa former Hamas member who defected to Israel and became an outspoken critic of the terror groupâfor 10 minutes before being removed by security. By comparison, Wuâs heckling of the ambassador lasted just 20 seconds.
Zou, on the other hand, had roughed up a student for protesting the CCP. If Harvard were going to bring the hammer down on anyone, surely it would be Zou and not the woman he manhandled.
But when the House Select Committee finally obtained the documents it had requestedâpolice reports, disciplinary records, and emails between senior university officials, among othersâit turned out Harvard had done the opposite.
The university placed Wu on disciplinary probation in May over her âinappropriate social behavior.â And it gave Zou, who had been identified and disparaged on social media, a letter of apology.
Zou had violated Harvardâs âPolicy on Physical Violence,â the university informed him in an email. But the academic dean of the education school, Martin West, had decided ânot to impose any sanctions in response to this violationââin part because of the blowback Zou had received online.
âI understand that your intentions were to prevent the event from being further disrupted,â West wrote. âI also acknowledge that you and your family have experienced significant harm as a result of the event, which I deeply regret.â
Wu, meanwhile, would have a permanent note in her file. Probations become part of a studentâs âofficial record,â according to the Harvard College Handbook, and must be mentioned in all recommendations provided by the school.
âThis is yet another example of Harvardâs appallingly unequal treatment of protestors based on the speech they support,â said Rep. John Moolenaar (R., Mich.), the chairman of the House Select Committee on the CCP. âHarvard is punishing brave students who spoke out against the CCPâs human rights abuses while not only letting the student who assaulted them off scot-free but also handing him an apology.â
This story is based on documents that the House committee shared with the Washington Free Beacon. The materials, which have not been previously reported, suggest that Harvard is more inclined to tolerate protests against a democratic ally than those against an authoritarian adversaryâone with a long record of targeting its critics on American campuses.
Students from China have been known to harass, intimidate, and even spy on fellow expats who criticize the CCP, flagging speech critical of the regime for the authorities in Beijing. Some have even been convicted of making physical threats: In April, a Chinese national at the Berklee College of Music was sentenced to nine months in prison for stalking a fellow Chinese student who had posted pro-democracy fliers around campus, attempting to find out where he lived and promising to chop off his hands.
Such incidents were top of mind for the House committee when it began investigating Harvard in June. In a letter to the university, Moolenaar wrote that the assault of Cosette Wu was consistent with a pattern of Chinese students harassing their peers who speak out against the CCP. He also noted the Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA)âthe student group to which Zou belongedâhas played a role in that repression, with over 150 chapters on American campuses alone.
According to the State Department, CSSA chapters across the country âmonitor Chinese students and mobilize them against views that dissent from the CCPâs stance.â They have become more influential in recent years as U.S. universities have cracked down on Confucius Institutes, other CCP front groups, citing their ties to the Chinese regime.
Wuâs assault âraises serious questionsâ about âthe involvement of international students from China at Harvard in acts of harassment and intimidation condoned by the Chinese government,â Moolenaarâs committee wrote in its letter. As such, the committee wanted to know whether Zou, the student captured on video manhandling his classmate, had been a member of Harvardâs CSSA.
The university said that he was, though it declined to identify the student and redacted his name from the documents it provided to the committee.
The Free Beacon was nonetheless able to confirm Zouâs identity by cross-referencing videos of the incidentâin which his face is clearly visibleâwith a picture of Zou on Harvardâs CSSA website, where he is listed as a co-chair of alumni relations.
Further corroboration of Zouâs identity comes in the emails Harvard officials exchanged as they debated whether to take disciplinary action against him. Those messages allude to posts on X and LinkedIn that identified Zou, disclosed information about his brother, and even claimed he was the son of CCP officials.
Though the Free Beacon could not independently confirm the claims about Zouâs parents, Kevin Boehm, the assistant dean for student affairs at Harvard Graduate School of Education, indicated that Zou was distraught, telling West in an email that the âdoxxingâ had taken its toll.
âI was initially made aware of this incident when [the student] reported that his personal information, as well as that of his brother and parents, had been shared publicly in what he described as a âdoxxingâ incident based on the footage of the exchange that had been shared on multiple social media platforms,â Boehm wrote on May 9. â[He] was seeking logistical and mental health support as he dealt with the reality of his familyâs information being shared.â
West replied the next day that he had decided not to sanction Zou because of the social media firestorm the student had endured. âMy view,â he wrote, âis that the internet has probably punished [him] enough at this point.â
The exchanges also indicate that Zou told Boehm that he had been instructed to âmaintain orderâ by an âevent staff member,â whom West and Boehm could not identify, and that Zou âdid not escort the young woman off the premises; instead, I accompanied her to meet nearby campus security personnel.â
Those answers appear to have satisfied West, who on May 22 informed Zou that he would be allowed to graduate the next day.
âWe are grateful for your contributions to the Education Policy and Analysis masterâs degree program this year and look forward to conferring your degree at tomorrowâs Commencement ceremony,â West wrote. âIâm sorry that you wonât be here for the ceremony but hope that you are able to celebrate your accomplishments with your family.â
Though the email acknowledged that Zou had violated Harvardâs Policy on Physical Violence, it did not mention that his conduct had been classified as assault and battery in an April 20 incident report submitted to Massachusetts State Police.
Zou did not respond to a request for comment.
Harvardâs director of media relations, Jason Newton, told the Free Beacon that âthe university does not comment on individual disciplinary proceedings or cases.â
It is less clear how Harvard officials decided that Wu should be disciplined for her disruption. A subcommittee of Harvardâs Administrative Board, which oversees undergraduate student discipline, initially recommended that Wu be âadmonished,â rather than formally sanctioned, for âinappropriate social behavior,â noting in a May 17 report that she had apologized in a meeting with the board for disrupting the Chinese ambassador.
The report also stated that Wu, who in 2023 cofounded the Coalition of Students Resisting the CCP, had not realized her protest violated any rules.
âIn her eyes, the disruption served to help the audience think critically about the ambassadorâs speech and did not prevent the audience from hearing it in the first place,â the subcommittee wrote. âUltimately, [she] felt that her actions did not limit the ambassador from giving his overall message and took up little time.â
But later that day, the full board voted to place Wu on disciplinary probation against the advice of its subcommittee. âThe Board felt this incident warranted a formal disciplinary response,â it told her in an email. Though the probation would only last a few days, from May 17-20, and would not âappear permanentlyâ on Wuâs transcript, the board stated that the punishment would be disclosed to âgraduate or professional schools under circumstances,â without specifying what those circumstances are. The line likely refers to letters of recommendation, which, per the Harvard College Handbook, âmust alwaysâ mention âprobation for disciplinary reasons.â
It is not clear how much West knew about the Administrative Board proceedings taking place at the undergraduate level or vice versa. At Harvard, the university acknowledged in July, âeach School is responsible for determining discipline for its own students.â The university has since piloted procedures to coordinate fact-finding in cases involving multiple schools.
Harvard also placed on probation two other students who had disrupted Xieâs talk: Tsering Yangchen, the co-president of Bostonâs chapter of Students for a Free Tibet, and another student whom the Free Beacon could not identify. Both individuals had been escorted out, promptly and peacefully, by security.
âI wish I could say I was surprised, but this is par for the course for Harvard,â said Virginia Foxx (R., N.C.), the chairwoman of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, which is conducting a separate investigation of the university over its handling of anti-Semitism. âThe only consistent part of the universityâs disciplinary standards is that theyâre always applied selectively to the benefit of favored groups.â
Those groups, she continued, include âpro-CCP agitatorsâ as well as anti-Israel students.
Wu and Yanchen declined to comment.
News of the disparate disciplinary actions comes as Jewish students are suing Harvard for the schoolâs uneven enforcement of school rules in the wake of the Oct. 7 attacks, when anti-Israel protesters took over public spaces, used megaphones inside campus buildings, and disrupted classes and events. The lawsuit, which was filed in January before the Chinese ambassadorâs appearance at the Kennedy School, describes several cases in which Harvard tolerated those disruptions or canceled programming to avoid them.
Many of the protests appeared to violate Harvardâs Statement on Rights and Responsibilitiesâthe policy against disrupting events that the university used to punish Wu.
The contrast could strengthen the argument, made at length in the 77-page complaint, that Harvardâs willingness to tolerate certain disruptions but not others amounts to anti-Semitic discrimination.
The university âselectively enforces its own rules, deeming Jewish victims unworthy of the protections it readily affords non-Jewish ones,â the complaint reads. âHarvardâs clearly unreasonable response to antisemitic discrimination and harassment reflects an egregious double standard, as it is at odds with Harvardâs aggressive enforcement of its policies concerning alleged misconduct not involving antisemitism.â
Xie is not the first foreign diplomat to be disrupted at Harvard: Protesters interrupted Michael Herzog, Israelâs ambassador to the United States, when he came to the Kennedy School in 2022. It is not clear whether those students faced any consequences for the disruption.
Original News Source â Washington Free Beacon
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