London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Friday, Aug 22, 2025

Mainland, Taiwanese students flee HK’s campuses

Batches of students left universities for the mainland via police ferry or bullet train, but evacuation denied

A ship from the Hong Kong police’s marine division emerged from the morning mist of Hong Kong’s Tolo Harbor at dawn on Wednesday and quietly berthed at a pier near the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) in the New Territories where a group of students carrying suitcases had been waiting anxiously to board.

The boat soon cast off for a destination said to be a police facility close to the city’s border with mainland China, after constables inspected the identity documents of the students as only mainlanders were allowed onboard.

The seemingly covert police evacuation operation was carefully planned and carried out in the early hours, when most of the black-clad protesters – local CUHK students and outsiders – were still sleeping under the stars on a footbridge leading to the main entrance of the campus after a night of fierce battles with riot police involving Molotov cocktails, tear gas canisters and rubber bullets.

More ferry rides to safety would be arranged for remaining mainland students at CUHK, and the police also confirmed during a press briefing Wednesday afternoon that they had deployed a boat to help non-local students who wished to leave the campus since main roads were all barricaded and the nearby train station was shut amid widespread vandalism.

The numerous mainland students who study at tertiary institutions in Hong Kong are packing up and leaving, flustered by the ongoing chaos that has spilled over onto their campuses and inevitably affected their lives when many merely wanted to stay out of the raging altercations.

Even the most apolitical ones are now wondering in trepidation if their continued stay at CUHK and other universities would be safe, and some were urged by their concerned parents to return home immediately.

Since Monday, mainland students also thronged the departure hall inside Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Station to board cross-boundary intercity bullet trains to Shenzhen and Guangzhou, after train services to two border checkpoints were suspended by the MTR Corp, the city’s subway operator, for safety reasons when debris and even petrol bombs were thrown onto open-air tracks.

One student who hailed from China’s eastern Zhejiang province told Asia Times that the CUHK’s high ranking – it was constantly ranked among the world’s top 50 by the prestigious British consultancy firm Quacquarelli Symonds – was the prime reason she chose to study here. But she said it was heart-wrenching to see what had overtaken her campus, with scenes resembling a battlefield choked with tear gas.

She also feared that they would become a collateral target when anti-government and anti-China emotions were running high.

A drawn-out face-off between protesters and a riot contingent since Monday has been renewed as students put up stiff resistance when police launched sorties to charge into the campus to stop radicals hurling objects onto nearby tracks and a busy highway.

At one point CUHK’s vice-chancellor Rocky Tuan was also tear-gassed when he tried to make peace and reconcile the conflicting demands from both sides.



On Wednesday evening, CUHK announced that its council had decided to end the current semester and suspend all classes, having taking stock of the “fast deteriorating circumstance,” and soon its Shenzhen campus announced it would offer free accommodation to those who decided to flee the main campus in Hong Kong.

The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) also said its research park in Guangzhou would also receive mainland students. The Education University of Hong Kong arranged free buses to ferry mainland students to border checkpoints. The Baptist University is also offering a one-off subsidy of HK$1,000 (US$128) to all non-local students if they choose to leave the city.

Earlier, Beijing’s liaison office in Hong Kong issued a safety reminder to mainland students after an undergraduate at HKUST was roughed up by locals after they quibbled over politics. Yet the office has denied the ongoing efforts to assist mainland students were “evacuation operations.”

Various clansmen associations and pro-Beijing outfits have also arranged off-campus accommodation for affected students. It was also reported that Shenzhen’s official youth association reserved free beds at its cluster of 12 hostels throughout the city.

But a few have decided to stay, saying their local classmates and roommates were all nice to them and the developments in Hong Kong had been particularly blown up by Chinese state media and posts circulating on social media platforms, which looked more like fiction than the actual reality.

They said that, despite their mainland identity, they deeply identified with Hongkongers’ demands and also opposed the now-retracted China extradition bill, which stoked the mass protests since June.

Meanwhile, Taiwan’s Central News Agency reported that the island’s semi-official office in Hong Kong had also arranged coaches and at least one China Airlines flight for Taiwanese students at CUHK and other universities to return to the island for free. More than 100 flew back to Taipei on Wednesday evening.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council said more than 1,000 Taiwanese students were enrolled at universities in Hong Kong in the current academic year and none had been hurt or arrested during the turmoil in recent months.

Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Ukraine Declares De Facto War on Hungary and Slovakia with Terror Drone Strikes on Their Gas Lifeline
Animated K-pop Musical ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Becomes Netflix’s Most-Watched Original Animated Film
New York Appeals Court Voids Nearly $500 Million Civil Fraud Penalty Against Trump While Upholding Fraud Liability
Elon Musk tweeted, “Europe is dying”
Far-Right Activist Convicted of Incitement Changes Gender and Demands: "Send Me to a Women’s Prison" | The Storm in Germany
Hungary Criticizes Ukraine: "Violating Our Sovereignty"
Will this be the first country to return to negative interest rates?
Child-free hotels spark controversy
North Korea is where this 95-year-old wants to die. South Korea won’t let him go. Is this our ally or a human rights enemy?
Hong Kong Launches Regulatory Regime and Trials for HKD-Backed Stablecoins
China rehearses September 3 Victory Day parade as imagery points to ‘loyal wingman’ FH-97 family presence
Trump Called Viktor Orbán: "Why Are You Using the Veto"
Horror in the Skies: Plane Engine Exploded, Passengers Sent Farewell Messages
MSNBC Rebrands as MS NOW Amid Comcast’s Cable Spin-Off
AI in Policing: Draft One Helps Speed Up Reports but Raises Legal and Ethical Concerns
Shame in Norway: Crown Princess’s Son Accused of Four Rapes
Apple Begins Simultaneous iPhone 17 Production in India and China
A Robot to Give Birth: The Chinese Announcement That Shakes the World
Finnish MP Dies by Suicide in Parliament Building
Outrage in the Tennis World After Jannik Sinner’s Withdrawal Storm
William and Kate Are Moving House – and the New Neighbors Were Evicted
Class Action Lawsuit Against Volkswagen: Steering Wheel Switches Cause Accidents
Taylor Swift on the Way to the Super Bowl? All the Clues Stirring Up Fans
Dogfights in the Skies: Airbus on Track to Overtake Boeing and Claim Aviation Supremacy
Tim Cook Promises an AI Revolution at Apple: "One of the Most Significant Technologies of Our Generation"
Apple Expands Social Media Presence in China With RedNote Account Ahead of iPhone 17 Launch
Are AI Data Centres the Infrastructure of the Future or the Next Crisis?
Cambridge Dictionary Adds 'Skibidi,' 'Delulu,' and 'Tradwife' Amid Surge of Online Slang
Bill Barr Testifies No Evidence Implicated Trump in Epstein Case; DOJ Set to Release Records
Zelenskyy Returns to White House Flanked by European Allies as Trump Pressures Land-Swap Deal with Putin
The CEO Who Replaced 80% of Employees for the AI Revolution: "I Would Do It Again"
Emails Worth Billions: How Airlines Generate Huge Profits
Character.ai Bets on Future of AI Companionship
China Ramps Up Tax Crackdown on Overseas Investments
Japanese Office Furniture Maker Expands into Bomb Shelter Market
Intel Shares Surge on Possible U.S. Government Investment
Hurricane Erin Threatens U.S. East Coast with Dangerous Surf
EU Blocks Trade Statement Over Digital Rule Dispute
EU Sends Record Aid as Spain Battles Wildfires
JPMorgan Plans New Canary Wharf Tower
Zelenskyy and his allies say they will press Trump on security guarantees
Beijing is moving into gold and other assets, diversifying away from the dollar
Escalating Clashes in Serbia as Anti-Government Protests Spread Nationwide
The Drought in Britain and the Strange Request from the Government to Delete Old Emails
Category 5 Hurricane in the Caribbean: 'Catastrophic Storm' with Winds of 255 km/h
"No, Thanks": The Mathematical Genius Who Turned Down 1.5 Billion Dollars from Zuckerberg
The surprising hero, the ugly incident, and the criticism despite victory: "Liverpool’s defense exposed in full"
Digital Humans Move Beyond Sci-Fi: From Virtual DJs to AI Customer Agents
YouTube will start using AI to guess your age. If it’s wrong, you’ll have to prove it
Jellyfish Swarm Triggers Shutdown at Gravelines Nuclear Power Station in Northern France
×