Nasa facing backlash from US researchers due to rejection of
Chinese nationals from conference
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A law passed in March prohibits anyone from China from setting foot in a Nasa building. Photograph: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP |
Nasa is facing an extraordinary backlash from US researchers
after it emerged that the space agency has banned Chinese scientists, including
those working at US institutions, from a conference on grounds of national
security.
Nasa officials rejected applications from Chinese nationals
who hoped to attend the meeting at the agency's Ames research centre in
California next month citing a law, passed in March, which prohibits anyone
from China setting foot in a Nasa building.
The law is part of a broad and aggressive move initiated by
congressman Frank Wolf, chair of the House appropriations committee, which has
jurisdiction over Nasa. It aims to restrict the foreign nationals' access to
Nasa facilities, ostensibly to counter espionage.
But the ban has angered many US scientists who say Chinese
students and researchers in their labs are being discriminated against. A
growing number of US scientists have now decided to boycott the meeting in
protest, with senior academics withdrawing individually, or pulling out their
entire research groups.
The conference is being held for US and international teams
who work on Nasa's Kepler space telescope programme, which has been searching
the cosmos for signs of planets beyond our solar system. The meeting is the
most important event in the academic calendar for scientists who specialise in
the field.
Alan Boss, co-organiser of the Kepler conference, refused to
discuss the issue, but said: "This is not science, it's politics
unfortunately."
Geoff Marcy, an astronomy professor at the University of
California, Berkeley, who has been tipped to win a Nobel prize for his
pioneering work on exoplanets, or planets outside the solar system, called the
ban "completely shameful and unethical".
In an email sent to the conference organisers, Marcy said:
"In good conscience, I cannot attend a meeting that discriminates in this
way. The meeting is about planets located trillions of miles away, with no
national security implications," he wrote.
"It is completely unethical for the United States of
America to exclude certain countries from pure science research," Marcy
told the Guardian. "It's an ethical breach that is unacceptable. You have
to draw the line."
Debra Fischer, professor of astronomy at Yale University,
said she became aware of the ban only when a Chinese post-doctoral student in
her lab, Ji Wang, was rejected from the conference. When Nasa confirmed that Ji
was banned because of his nationality, Fischer decided to pull out of the
meeting. She told her students: "I cannot say don't go, but I'm boycotting
the meeting." Her team followed suit and has withdrawn from the meeting.
The law allows Nasa to apply for a waiver against the ban in
special circumstances, but any appeal would have been rejected under a
moratorium that has been introduced by the agency's administrator, Charles
Bolden.
Chinese applicants were told they could not attend the
conference in an email sent by Mark Messersmith, a Kepler project specialist at
Nasa Ames. "Unfortunately … federal legislation passed last March forbids
us from hosting any citizens of the People's Republic of China at a conference
held at facilities of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Regarding
those who are already working at other institutions in the US, due to security
issues resulting from recent Congressional actions, they are under the same
constraints," according to the email, seen by the Guardian.
The recent Congressional action refers to a broader law
passed in July which prohibits Nasa funds from being used to participate or
collaborate with China in any way. The law has raised fears among some
Nasa-funded scientists that they will have to sever ties with their Chinese
collaborators, and no longer take on Chinese students.
Marcy said the law would damage relationships built up
between US and Chinese researchers that could be valuable lines of
communication if conflicts arose between the two nations in the future.
Sir Martin Rees, Britain's astronomer royal, said he
"fully supported" Marcy's position and called the ban "a
deplorable 'own goal' by the US".
Chris Lintott, an astronomer at Oxford University, called
for a total boycott of the conference until the situation had been resolved.
"I'm shocked and upset by the way this policy has been applied. Science is
supposed to be open to all and restricting those who can attend by nationality
goes against years of practice, going right back to cold war conferences of
Russian and western physicists," he said. "The Kepler team should
move their conference somewhere else – and I hope everyone boycotts until they
do."
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