Tufts University announced on Wednesday that it is not going to renew its contract with the Confucius Institute after it expires in September this year. The decision was made in response to a 13-week long protest against the controversial educational program.
On March 13, about 100 protesters rallied in front of the CITU building in Medford, MA, marched through the campus, and demonstrated near Ballou Hall, where the president’s office is located, demanding the university to close the CI.
“I want to be clear, this is not a question of opportunities to study Chinese culture or language, we know that Tufts can find any other Chinese exchange program that isn’t directly sponsored by the authoritarian state,” Massachusetts State Representative Erika Uyterhoeven (Democrat) said at the rally.
“It’s about distorting academic discourse, silencing defenders of human rights, and repressing open dissent or discussion, and it’s a growing threat to the integrity of our academic institutions, and threat to democracy everywhere,” she added.

Protest
Members from the Tibetan, Uyghur, Taiwanese, and Hongkonger communities, together with Tufts students and faculty, and human rights activists from Massachusetts and mainland China took part in the protest on March 13.
The protesters chanted loudly: “Chinese government out of Tufts! CCP out of Tufts! Hey-hey-ho-ho, Chinese government got to go!” Most of them held up banners, posters, brochures, and sign boards.
Bayul said that they had protested for 13 weeks, appealing to the university and its president, Anthony Monaco, to shut down the Chinese language program sponsored by the repressive Chinese regime.

CITU
The Confucius Institute has been controversial in the United States for allegedly promoting the CCP's propaganda and censoring discussions about human rights conditions in China. On Aug. 13, 2020, then U.S. President Donald Trump designated the Confucius Institute U.S. Center (CIUS) as a foreign mission.Confucius Institutes in Massachusetts have sparked protests since 2018. In January 2019, the University of Massachusetts Boston announced that it would not renew its contract with Hanban, a Chinese government agency that provides funding and staff for CIs.

In October 2019, Tufts University announced a two-year renewal of its contract with the CI after a committee of the school claimed “no evidence of suppression of academic freedom, pressure or censorship associated with the activities of the Confucius Institute at Tufts.”
Sarah Phillips, a member of the Somerville School Committee, said in her speech at the March 13 protest that the CCP and its affiliated organizations are good at disguising themselves and hiding their agenda.
“I know Tufts professors and administrators are top-notch. But this is the Chinese government that we’re talking about. They were able to hide the internment of one to three million Uyghurs and Turkic speaking people in concentration camps for more than two years,” Phillips said.