Headlines
  • On Monday at 14:00 GMT, the US military says it would start blockading Iranian ports, preventing ships from entering or leaving Iran from passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • In the southern town of Biyyada, Hezbollah claims that its men have attacked Israeli soldiers with "a swarm of attack drones."
  • US President Donald Trump's threat to block the Strait of Hormuz was deemed "ridiculous" by Iran's navy chief, Shahram Irani.
  • Any military ships approaching the Strait of Hormuz "will be considered a violation of the ceasefire and will be met with severe force," according to a statement released on Sunday by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
  • The speaker of Iran's parliament Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf ​ is leading the delegation that has arrived to Pakistan for talks with the United States.
  • Nawaf Salam, the prime minister of Lebanon, stated that he was working to ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and to put an end to the Israel-Hezbollah conflict.
  • Viktor Orban, the longtime prime minister of Hungary, has conceded defeat to Peter Magyar in the country's legislative election.

More Details

Chinese Police Pressure Family of U.S.-Based Student Over support for ‘Bridge Man’

Han Yutao’s brother told him not to be a ‘traitor to China,’ likely to protect himself from retaliation by proxy

By Mia Ping-chieh Chen for RFA Mandarin, Yitong Wu and Chingman for RFA Cantonese

Han Yutao, a Chinese student at Bellevue College in Washington state, expressed solidarity with the “Stone Bridge Warriors.”Photo Credit: Han Yutao Via RFA

Police in Beijing have contacted the family of a Chinese student studying in the United States after he expressed support online for the “Bridge Man” protester, who unfurled banners on a Beijing bridge calling on ruling Chinese leader Xi Jinping to step down on the eve of the 20th Communist party’s congress.

Police in Beijing’s Zhongguancun district contacted the parents and brother of Han Yutao, a student at Bellevue College in Washington state, after he posted a video clip on social media expressing solidarity with the “Bridge Man” protester, who has been identified as Peng Lifa. 

Han, 23, also walked around the Bellevue campus with a placard, telling everyone he met about Peng, who has been hailed as a hero similar to the 1989 “tank man” for his brave and rare public protest.

Within a day of his video appearing, Chinese police had contacted Han’s family, putting pressure on them to persuade him not to be a “traitor,” and to distance themselves from him, Han told RFA.

“On Oct. 19, police from Zhongguancun West district found my family and knocked on their door,” Han told RFA. “They asked for my mother’s phone number, then called her and asked her where I go to school, when I left China, what I’m studying, then asked for my phone number in the U.S.”

“Everyone in my family was telling me [not to do any more protests],” he said.

“My brother was trying to talk me out of [my views], telling me not to be a traitor, and not to be used as a ‘hitman’ by others,” Han added. “He said he wanted nothing to do with traitors to China, or those who took their money, which wasn’t nice to hear.”

“But I understand … he was trying to protect himself,” he said.

An officer who answered the phone at the Zhongguancun West district police station declined to comment when contacted by RFA on Thursday.

Han said police also confiscated a number of his books that were published on the democratic island of Taiwan, which isn’t subject to China’s censorship. 

“If they contact me, I don’t plan to give in to their arrogance,” Han said. “I will start by telling them how evil the Communist Party is first … to try to prod their conscience.”

Han said he had his eyes opened to the nature of the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP, after hearing family members talk about the 1989 Tiananmen massacre by the People’s Liberation Army, which used machine guns and tanks to suppress weeks-long mass, student-led protests in and around Tiananmen Square.

He said Peng — who goes by the social media handle Peng Zaizhou in a reference to popular anger with governments — struck a chord because of his sheer bravery.

“Why do I support Peng Zaizhou? Because I don’t want to be afraid of the CCP any more,” Han said. “I felt very ashamed even back in China that I was being suppressed by the CCP.”

“Why did I show my face? Because justice should be upright,” he said.

Former 1989 student leader Zhou Fengsuo, who founded the U.S.-based rights group Humanitarian China, said the tactics used by the Chinese government are redolent of the criminal underworld.

“Han Yutao showed his face and used his real name, which is very risky,” Zhou said. “That the CCP is threatening the family members of international students shows [the government’s] anger.” 

Zhou said the timing of Peng’s banners, which also called for an end to COVID-19 lockdowns and for democratic elections ahead of a party congress that will likely approve Xi Jinping’s precedent-breaking third term in office, made the authorities even more nervous.

“They are panicking even more right now, showing that this regime has no legitimacy. They’re a gangster regime that resorts to kidnapping,” he said.

Rights groups say China increasingly engages in unofficial renditions of overseas critics from compliant nations, while Beijing was widely criticized for engaging in “hostage diplomacy” with the arrests and sentencing of Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig in the wake of the 2018 arrest of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver.

“Peng Lifa had a kind of Tank Man energy, and his upstanding actions inspired a lot of people,” Zhou said. “Courage really is contagious.”

Meanwhile, Han said he had received support and solidarity from non-Chinese students at Bellevue, but not from fellow Chinese nationals, who remain under threat of being reported to the authorities if they step out of line politically while overseas.

“I showed my placard to a lot of Chinese students here, but they mostly acted indifferent, as they are really afraid of getting into trouble,” Han said. “So they would look at my placard with scorn, as if I were some kind of weirdo.”

Chinese students studying overseas risk having similar repercussions as Han experienced against loved ones back home, as well as the prospect of being invited for “tea” with the state security police when they go home. State security police have also been known to call them and threaten them outright during their studies.

Han said he was well aware of those risks before he acted, but felt he couldn’t stay silent.

“I thought, why should I fear the tyranny [of the CCP] here in the U.S.?” he said. “Does that mean I have to keep quiet for the rest of my life?”

Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.

Copyright © 1998-2020, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036. https://www.rfa.org.

Related Article

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026

Japan’s Combat Role in Philippines War…

Japan sending combat troops to participate in upcoming exercises in the Philippines is a signal of a ...
April 9, 2026

PNG-Australia Defense Treaty Creates Jobs, Risks…

Six months after Papua New Guinea and Australia signed a bilateral defense treaty, public opinion in ...
April 8, 2026

China-US Competition for Rare Earths Sparks…

A U.S. plan to potentially mine an area of Pacific seabed roughly the size of Nevada near two U.S. t ...
April 2, 2026

North Korean Hackers Offer $70,000 Per…

Cybersecurity engineer Toufik Airane was approached by a North Korean hacker who offered him a small ...
March 27, 2026

Vietnam Protests China’s Development of Disputed…

Vietnam has condemned China’s land reclamation activities at Antelope reef in the disputed Paracel ...
March 24, 2026

Other Article

Bizzare News

World’s Smallest Hotel

Recognized by Guiness World Records on April 18, 2023, Trafo-Häuschen is the current title holder o ...
April 13, 2026
Pet Corner

Pumi Dog Breed

The small sized Pumi dog breed is a harding dog that originated in Hungary.This type of dog has upri ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Computer Incident Handling

Businesses and organizations can create an effective strategy to guarantee cybersecurity by using in ...
News & Views

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026
Pick of the Day

Press Briefing on Humanitarian Situation in…

Edem Wosornu, Director of the Crisis Response Division in the Office for the Coordination of Humanit ...
Bizzare News

Texas Woman Sentenced to Six Years…

After pleading a guilty plea to mailing synthetic cannabinoids and other drugs into facilities run b ...
April 10, 2026

Top