THE NAB: ONE BEIJING TO RULE THEM ALL, ONE BEIJING TO BIND THEM
Beaver Issue 828 | 17.02.15
the
newspaper of the LSE Studentsâ Union
50 Years On: When Malcolm X Spoke at LSE
Rayhan Uddin LSESU Democracy Committee
âcontrary to what was previously insinuated in The Beaver, this doesnât mean it is a secretâ. The spokesperson stressed that âthe money does not come from the Chinese stateâ In October 2014, The Beaver ran an interview with the journalist and LSE alumnus John Sweeney, who produced the documentary âNorth Korea Undercoverâ after accompanying LSE students on a trip organised by the Grimshaw International Relations club in April 2013.
ON THIS DAY 50 YEARS AGO, human rights activist Malcolm X delivered a talk to LSE students in the Old Theatre. Invited by the Africa Society, Malcolm addressed the topic of âthe relationship between the African states today and the Black Muslim movementâ. The event was part of his tour of Africa and Europe which took place from late 1964 to early 1965, and included academic institutions such as Oxford University and the University of Ghana. The talk on February 11th 1965 at LSE was one of Malcolm Xâs last ever public addresses. He was assassinated 10 days later in New York City. The full content of Malcolm Xâs speech at LSE can be read on page 9. Speaking on the conflict which occurred in Congo during its decolonisation from Belgian rule, Malcolm notes âIf you recall reading in the paper, they never talked about the Congolese who were being slaughtered. But as soon as a few whites, the lives of a few whites were at stake, they began to speak of âwhite hostagesâ, âwhite missionariesâ, âwhite priestsâ, âwhite nunsââas if a white life, one white life, was of such greater value than a Black life, than a thousand Black lives.â Such rhetoric will no doubt resonate with many today, not least within the âBlack Lives Matterâ campaign which formed in response to the deaths of unarmed black Americans at the hands of white police officers. More recently, it also strikes a chord with the âNigerian Lives Matterâ movement which rallied in response to the lack of media publicity of over 2000 Nigerians killed by Boko Haram, in comparison to the media response to the Charlie Hebdo massacre which killed 12 people in Paris.
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Hague Against the Machine: Hollywood actress and Special Envoy for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Angelina Jolie joined former UK Foreign Secretary William Hague last week to launch a new centre for the study of violence against women in war zones. News, page 5
LSE China Programme Funded by Mining Giant âą BHP Billiton Funds Civil Servant Training Scheme âą Chinese state pays over ÂŁ850 000 for Confucius Institute Jon Allsop, Executive Editor Mike Pearson, Staff Writer
THE EXECUTIVE PUBLIC Policy Training Programme (EPPTP), an LSE hosted centre training âsenior Chinese government officialsâ is paid for by BHP Billiton, an Australian-based multinational mining and petroleum company, according to freedom of information requests (FOIs) seen by The Beaver. It has also emerged that the LSE has received over ÂŁ850 000 to
date from the Chinese government to fund its Confucius Centre. For their role in running the EPPTP, which is based at the University of Peking and run jointly by the LSE, Columbia University and Sciences Po Paris, LSE receives US$33 000 a year from BHP Billiton, an Anglo-Australian firm which is one of the highest earning mining companies in the world. BHP Billiton has recently been striving to develop close ties with China. In December 2014, after announcing the shipment of the one billionth tonne of iron ore to the
country, Chief Executive Andrew Mackenzie said that âChina is of immense importance to BHP Billiton and to Australiaâ and that the company âalways strives to develop closer ties to Chinaâ. An article from the Financial Times written last June, meanwhile, argued that the company has been âpin(ning) its hopes on Chinaâs energy demandâ. An LSE spokesperson admitted that the BHP Billiton funding is âso small it doesnât show up as a particular budget line in the Schoolâs Annual Accountsâ but argued that
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