International universities will not be affected under China’s new law exerting security controls on foreign nongovernmental organisations, said the country’s Ministry of Public Security in a meeting with the European Chamber of Commerce.
Hao Yunhong, deputy director general of the NGO management office at MPS, told the Chamber in Beijing that a foreign university coming to China to recruit students will not be required to comply with the law, which comes into effect on 1 January 2017.
“These activities are not subject to the NGO law, as they are subject to MOE regulations”
“Foreign universities may engage in recruiting activities in China through overseas study agencies that have a license from the Ministry of Education,” said Hao. “These activities are not subject to the NGO law, as they are subject to MOE regulations.”
The comments came after Maggie Xie, general manager and head of government affairs of European Chamber’s Beijing Chapter, briefed the Ministry on growing member concerns over the implementation of the new bill, which authorises police to ban any group found to have violated the regulations.
The law, entitled ‘Management of Foreign NonGovernment Organizations Activities in China’, stipulates that all foreign NGOs must register with public security officials to continue their operations.
It also states that foreign schools, hospitals, natural science and engineering research organisations or academic organisations are not subject to the law when they are conducting exchanges with Chinese counterparts.
However, they must refrain from engaging in political or religious activities, or acting in a way that damages China’s national security or unity, according to the outline of the law now available on the MPS website.
Despite the restrictions, Hao said Beijing welcomes overseas NGOs to work in China for “the benefit of economic development” and “people’s welfare”. The law is to better serve them and safeguard their legitimate rights and interests, he said.
There are over 7,000 foreign NGOs currently operating in China.