University of Queensland student Drew Pavlou faces two year suspension for public criticism of Queensland relations with China

·

Greek Australian student activist Drew Pavlou is facing a two year suspension from the University of Queensland after public criticism of Queensland’s links to Chinese Government organisations.

A closed disciplinary hearing considered whether Drew Pavlou breached the university’s code of conduct, mainly stemming from his activism on campus against the Chinese Communist Party.

On Friday evening, Mr Pavlou tweeted he had been “expelled for two years” and had been given “no reasoning” and was threatened with consequences if he breached the confidentiality of [UQ’s] decision.

Mr Pavlou has long been critical of the university’s ties to Chinese Government organisations, including the Confucius Institute.

6 months away from graduation, Drew claims that his suspensions shows “how deep the Chinese Government influence goes in Australia and in other countries of the world.”

In a statement, UQ’s Chancellor Peter Varghese said he was advised of the outcome of the disciplinary action on Friday.

View image on Twitter

“There are aspects of the findings and the severity of the penalty which personally concern me,” he said.

“In consultation with the Vice-Chancellor, who has played no role in this disciplinary process, I have decided to convene an out-of-session meeting of UQ’s senate next week to discuss the matter.”

UQ has maintained the disciplinary hearing was not in relation to Mr Pavlou’s criticism of the university’s relationship with China.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Dr Yianni Cartledge traces the stories of Ikarians in Australia through archival research

Inspired by his own family history and the broader migrant experience, Dr Yianni Cartledge has published a book exploring Ikarian migration.

Elfa Moraitakis included among the most powerful people in Western Sydney

Elfa Moraitakis has been named among the most powerful people in Western Sydney in The Daily Telegraph’s list.

Chicago family returns ancient Greek artefacts to Greece

Five ancient Greek artefacts spanning from the 6th century BC to the Roman period have been returned to Greece by a family from Chicago.

Kefalonia beach voted as the second best beach in the world

Fteri Beach has been ranked the second most spectacular beach in the world for 2026 in the annual World’s 50 Beaches list.

Frank Alexopoulos says leaving construction job transformed his approach to fatherhood

Frank Alexopoulos says a call to Lifeline during a difficult period in his life transformed the way he approached fatherhood.

You May Also Like

Goals galore in 4-2 Sydney Olympic victory over APIA Leichhardt

A six-goal thriller ended in happiness for the Sydney Olympic FC first grade squad after beating APIA Leichhardt FC at Lambert Park 4-2.

Metro Trains manager investigated for tipping off cleaners for ‘surprise’ COVID-19 cleaning audit

IBAC is holding an inquiry into alleged corrupt payments from a cleaning company to two public transport officials; Peter Bollas and Transclean employee Steven Kyritsis.

Helen Patsikatheodorou OAM: “We are all vulnerable. We need one another”

Helen Patsikatheodorou is one of the Greeks honoured in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list with a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM).