mardi 28 mai 2019

Chinese-hunt: Emory University in Atlanta fires two Chinese over undisclosed funding ties to China

Sackings come after investigation into researchers at dozens of colleges financed by the National Institutes of Health
By Lu Zhenhua

Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, said it sacked two scientists over their funding and research ties to China.

Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, has sacked two Chinese scientists for failing to disclose their sources of overseas financing and research ties in China.
The university said on Thursday that an investigation revealed that the two Chinese faculty members had “failed to fully disclose foreign sources of research funding and the extent of their work for research institutions and universities in China”.
“Emory has shared this information with the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the faculty members are no longer employed at Emory,” the statement said, without naming the two.
Chinese science website Zhishi Fenzi identified the scientists as Li Xiaojiang and his wife, Li Shihua, who were professors in the university’s department of human genetics.
Quoting unnamed members of Li Xiaojiang’s research team, the website said the university shut down his laboratory on May 16 while he was on leave in China, seizing computers and documents and questioning other staff about the professors’ ties with China.
The profiles of both professors have been removed from the university’s website along with the homepage for Emory’s Li Laboratory.
The action came after the NIH, the main funding agency for biomedical and public health research in the US, started investigating the foreign ties of NIH-funded researchers at more than 55 US institutions, including Emory.
NIH director Francis Collins told a US Senate hearing in early April that the investigation found “egregious instances” of violation of rules for funding disclosure and intellectual property theft.
Li Xiaojiang had worked at Emory for more than two decades and led the university’s research on gene-editing technology, establishing on a pig model for treating Huntington’s disease, a fatal genetic disorder that causes the progressive breakdown of nerve cells in the brain.
He had been selected as a member of the Thousand Talents Programme, a Chinese government-backed scheme to encourage leading professionals to work in China. 
He previously worked for the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Reports on the website of Jinan University in Guangzhou indicate that Li Xiaojiang heads a research team at the university, where his wife is also a visiting scholar.

Intellectual property thieves: Li Xiaojiang (left) and Li Shihua (right)

In Atlanta, Emory denied that Chinese researchers had been singled out.
“It is important to note that Emory remains committed to the free exchange of ideas and research,” university spokesman Vince Dollard said.
“At the same time, Emory also takes very seriously its obligation to be a good steward of federal research dollars and to ensure compliance with all funding disclosure and other requirements.”
Chinese academics, engineers and companies have faced new challenges as tensions between China and the US have risen.
The NIH declined to reveal internal deliberations about a specific case, but said that in general it identified threats in three ways: notification by the FBI, an NIH-funded institution or an anonymous tip.
“Importantly, individuals that are being reviewed are not all of Chinese ethnicity. However, China’s Thousands Talents Programme is a known prominent player,” the NIH Office of Extramural Research said in a statement.
Washington denied the 10-year visas of a number of Chinese "experts" over allegations that they were spying for Chinese intelligence agencies. 
And, in addition to blacklisting Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei Technologies, the administration of US President Donald Trump is considering blocking more Chinese technology companies from the American market, according to US media reports.

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