BEIJING, (Reuters) – China has rebuked Norway for “violating the rights” of a Chinese scholar who was expelled from the country, state media said, in the latest friction that could strain ties already tense over a Nobel Peace Prize for a Chinese dissident.
Norwegian police had ordered the Chinese doctorate student working at the University of Agder to leave Norway before Jan. 23, state news agency Xinhua said late yesterday.
Ma Qiang, a political counsellor at the Chinese embassy in Norway, raised the issue with Norway’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday, Xinhua said.
He was quoted as saying that China was highly concerned about the issue and believed the action by Norwegian police against the student, who had been working on a wind-power project at the university for two years, was “totally baseless and unreasonable”.
Xinhua cited Norwegian broadcasting company NRK as saying that Norwegian authorities made the decision out of fear the student’s expertise could be used “for military purposes in other countries”.
“It is an infringement of the scholar’s rights, which has a damaging effect on Norway’s reputation and image in the international academic world and a negative impact on bilateral ties between China and Norway,” Ma was quoted as saying.