International Students Have Been Stuck on Beijing University Campuses for Months

Even before Beijing reduced its risk status at the end of April, many communities were already beginning to open up, allowing deliveries and service providers to enter with ease. As restrictions continue to loosen and some communities now even allow social visits, some international students are beginning to wonder when their campus will do the same.

And they have good reason to wonder given that they have essentially been stranded on campus since January.

Around Beijing, universities closed their gates as the pandemic spread and the majority of local students returned home for Chinese New Year, continuing their studies online. But going home has not been so simple for those international students who were either unable to acquire plane tickets home, did not have the money to do so, or were faced with not knowing when they'd be able to return to finish their studies. As a result, some chose to stay on campus, where they have remained ever since.

The Beijinger spoke to several such international students who said that they were never given an entry-exit pass, meaning that once they step off campus they are effectively unable to return to their dorms. Luckily, many have been able to order deliveries but must retrieve them through a fence at the edge of campus.

One student at the Beijing Film Academy said that his campus could grant a two-hour pass for students to leave in case of "necessity," such as visiting the bank, although longer passes valid for several hours were issued over the May Day holiday. "It’s not clear how and when the situation will evolve," said the student. "It seems like it just happens by the day."

"I chose to stay because I trust the Chinese government," another student told us. He is one of a couple of dozen international students who chose to sit tight at Beijing Normal University (pictured above), where he studies environmental science. Students on that campus are able to meet each other on campus but are not allowed to visit each other's dorms. "But now I’m getting bored," he continued. "I want to go outside and visit some other places."

We also called several university administrative departments, but they were unable to tell us where the order to keep campuses closed comes from, nor how long it will be in effect. They did tell us, however, that announcements of reopening will be issued ahead of time in order to give returning students time to make travel plans.

As large swaths of Beijing return to normal, it's growing increasingly clear that these students are being let down by the very institutions that they looked to to help better themselves.

READ: Africans in Beijing Share Mixed Feelings as Discrimination in Guangzhou Intensifies

Image: studyinchinas.com, anonymous student

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We are 70 odd people living in the Beijing institute of technology (Suzhou) outside the main campus dorm. The situation is very frustrating than inside the university. They don't allow us to go outside for months. we can only go outside for 80 mins/week. And the only way we can go is to first ask the school rep. for permission through WeChat and they allow us. This dorm is giving you an impression of a literal Prisoner Of War (POW) camp with just additional support of the internet. University administration is taking advantage because we need the degree. People in our embassy are a bunch of wankers, so what choice do we have? Thank you BIT.

Funny thing is every day they allow people to play in the basketball court (inside You+ for 30 mins., However, appointment needed) so that they can take pictures and show their superiors that everything is under control. Great!