Published: 18:06, April 29, 2022 | Updated: 18:06, April 29, 2022
Academic faces ‘unjust’ prosecution
By Lia Zhu in San Francisco

US academics are speaking out against the continuing impact of the canceled program as another Chinese American professor faces trial under the China Initiative.

Mingqing Xiao, an applied mathematician at Southern Illinois University (SIU), Carbondale, faces charges of defrauding the US government by failing to disclose his ties to Chinese universities. 

He is scheduled to appear in a federal court in Benton, Illinois, on May 2. The trial is expected to last two weeks.

Xiao, indicted a year ago, is the latest of some two dozen cases under the China Initiative, a controversial program launched by President Donald Trump in 2018 to fight economic espionage. Under pressure from critics who accused the program of racial profiling, the government discontinued the program in February.

The prosecutors said Xiao obtained a 2019 grant from the National Science Foundation to develop new mathematical tools for analyzing high-dimensional data sets while failing to tell SIU and NSF about his ties to Shenzhen University and Guangdong University of Technology.

Xiao, a US citizen since 2006, was named an outstanding SIU scholar in 2016.

The SIU Faculty Senate issued a resolution in December in support of Xiao, saying the government should drop all charges and asking the university to reinstate Xiao and finance his legal defense.

In Xiao’s case, “there are no allegations of espionage or intellectual property theft”, said Edward Benyas, professor of oboe (a double-reed woodwind instrument) and conducting at SIU Carbondale, “as his research is in fundamental mathematics and the results of which have and will be available to anyone”.

The government’s targeting “such an incredible teacher, scholar and human being” is especially reprehensible”, said Benyas at a recent webinar hosted by the American Physical Society, trying to call attention to Xiao’s case, which he said is “a perfect example of what went wrong”.

“The FBI’s pursuit of academics under the China Initiative may have ended, but existing cases are still in the courts, and new policies and pending legislation may still target the academic community in harmful ways,” said Phil Bucksbaum, professor in Natural Science at Stanford and a former APS president, at a recent webinar hosted by the APS.

There were 24 academics or government scientists involved in China Initiative cases, according to APA Justice. When the government announced it was canceling the program two months ago, cases against eight people had been dismissed, one had been acquitted by a judge, and trials were pending for six. All of the defendants are of Chinese background.

Earlier in April, one of the six researchers, Feng Tao, received a guilty verdict in Kansas for fraud and making a false statement, but legal experts said it could be overturned. But the judge for Tao’s case postponed sentencing, saying she saw “significant issues” with the government’s evidence.

Xiao’s trial is expected to be another test of the government prosecuting academics with ties to China, and the outcome of Xiao’s trial could shape whether the government’s effort is ultimately seen as justified or unfair, said some experts.

Most of the cases under the China Initiative have not involved charges that scientists improperly transferred any US-funded research results. Instead, they typically focus on academic integrity, similar to the charges that Tao and Xiao face.

In a December report, the MIT Technology Review identified 77 China Initiative cases and more than 150 defendants, the vast majority of whom are of Chinese heritage. It also found the prosecutions increasingly focus on research-integrity charges rather than espionage.

Many academics and civil rights groups have criticized the prosecutions, calling the China Initiative a “witch hunt” that fuels racial bias against scientists of Chinese origin and causes “a chilling effect” on legitimate research collaborations.

liazhu@chinadailyusa.com