Wednesday, May 8, 2024
Home Tags Chinese University of Hong Kong

Tag: Chinese University of Hong Kong

Gray leap forward: Xi Jinping shows natural hair color in a rare move for...

Defying decades of political tradition, China's most powerful man is going gray. Silver streaks in President Xi Jinping's hair spotted at the annual national legislative session, which began March 5, have captured attention and stirred speculation among China watchers as to what the radical change might mean. In official portraits and in public, top Chinese leaders -- who are usually in their 60s or older -- have long sported impeccable jet-black hair. But the trend has become more pronounced since the 1990s. "Xi Jinping wants to debunk this tradition to make himself look more like an ordinary Chinese citizen, a man of the people." A softened image This populist image has been carefully cultivated by the Chinese leader since he came to power in late 2012. "(Not dyeing his hair) could be a strategy to diminish criticism that he's building a Mao-style personality cult," said Lam. Political signals Observers can already count a growing number of senior officials showing their natural hair color in public. And if past leaders dyed their hair black to illustrate their health and vigor, 65-year-old Xi doesn't seem to have such a need, as one of the youngest Chinese heads of state in recent years. When officials ditched their Mao suits in favor of Western-style suits in the 1980s, it was an unequivocal message about the country's opening to the outside world.

Hong Kong’s fractious politics challenging for universities, says Tony Chan – the third man...

Heading the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology has become more complicated in recent years because of the city’s fractious politics, its outgoing president and acclaimed scientist Tony Chan Fan-cheong said, on the eve of his departure to another institution. “There have been enormous changes in Hong Kong over the past decade, with the greatest change in politics,” Chan said last week. The 66-year-old mathematician, who was headhunted from the United States to join HKUST in 2009, cited the political storms of Occupy movement in 2014 – in which many students took part the sit-ins to demand greater democracy – and the recent tide of calls for the city’s independence from China. “As the university is a microcosm of the society, the stance of the president, and the school, is between a rock and a hard place,” Chan told the Post. “We may put it simply that any illegal acts are banned. But are [calls for] Hong Kong independence violating laws?” he asked, saying the schools were thrown into difficult situations with no simple answers. The 10 university heads in Hong Kong eventually issued a joint statement, which included a line: “We do not support Hong Kong independence, which contravenes the Basic Law.” Chan dismissed any government pressure behind the rare statement, but admitted the process of drafting and getting everyone to agree was difficult. What was unfortunate, he said, was that public attention was so focused on the issue instead of the university’s strong performance. The 27-year-old school was first in the latest Times Higher Education young university rankings. “Worst of all, society has been torn apart and social development becomes stagnant,” he added.