Headlines
  • A "final, agreed upon text of the peace deal has been reached" between the US and Iran, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, with "next steps" still to be decided.
  • Iranian state media's description of an agreement, according to US President Trump earlier on Friday, has "nothing to do with the terms that were agreed to, in writing."
  • Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi has stated that a deal with the United States to put an end to fighting in Iran is close and includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
  • A mass shooting in Midland, Texas, on Friday morning resulted in one death and ten injuries. The alleged gunman is dead after a confrontation with police, according to authorities.
  • Monitoring group SITE reported on Friday that an Iran-affiliated hacking group known as Handala claimed to have breached FBI drones and vowed to target the 2026 World Cup.

More Details

Foreign Students ‘Taken From Shanghai’ as Teachers Resign From International Schools

Teachers leave the city in large numbers citing unreliable supplies, as South Korea demands its students be freed.

By Qiao Long, Hwang Chun-mei and Fong Tak Ho

The Shanghai lockdown has prompted an exodus of foreign students and teaching staff, as the city reported its first deaths from COVID-19. 

Foreign residents of the city, many of whom were working in the education sector, are being evacuated, with many consulates arranging for evacuation of their nationals back home, according to social media posts.

“It’s not just in Shanghai; teachers at the best international school in China have left,” Fudan University graduate Li Min told RFA. “They sent out a letter saying that while they have more than 100 years of history as an international school, the lockdowns have left them feeling hopeless in just a short period of time.”

“A large number of teachers [in Shanghai] have [also] resigned, because they can’t guarantee normal food and drink supplies there.”

One announcement from an international school in Shanghai seen by RFA said in a letter to parents: “Currently, 28 teachers have indicated that they may leave Shanghai by June 2, and 24 of them are expected to return to Shanghai in time for the next academic year.”

It said the school would move to distance learning until then.

“We must create an environment that retains our top teachers, rather than forcing them to resign or to hesitate about their responsibilities,” the letter said.

The South Korean consulate meanwhile wrote to Fudan University calling on university authorities to release the remaining South Korean students still locked down on campus.

Last week, half of the international students in China were evacuated by plane,” the letter said. “There are still [South] Korean students in various schools.”

“The Korean consulate wrote to Fudan University because the school wasn’t cooperating … and refused to allow them to leave.”

The letter described the students as “extremely panicked and helpless.”

40,000 Japanese nationals

A Shanghai resident surnamed Sun said Fudan’s foreign students have been transported out of Shanghai to isolation facilities in Zhejiang, Jiangsu and other provinces.

“The foreign students at Fudan are no longer in Shanghai and have been moved to Zhejiang and Jiangsu,” Sun said. “They got taken away when the temporary hospitals no longer had enough space.”

The Consulate General of Japan in Shanghai has also written to the local authorities to ask how long the lockdown will continue.

In a letter to deputy mayor Zong Ming, it said that around 40,000 Japanese nationals are currently living in Shanghai, and are “facing an unprecedented and difficult situation.”

It said some 11,000 Japanese-invested companies had been unable to operate normally for more than a month.

“The impact on the business activities of enterprises has become increasingly serious,” it said.

A Shanghai-based scholar surnamed Fan said the letter was a thinly veiled warning that Japanese companies could relocate, if the situation doesn’t improve soon.

Three official deaths

Health officials said on Monday that just three people have died from Covid-19 in Shanghai since the citywide lockdown began last month, although hundreds of thousands of cases of omicron have been recorded.

Public anger among Shanghai’s 26 million residents over the ongoing restrictions is growing, amid ongoing complaints of food shortages, substandard and unsafe accommodation in isolation facilities and heavy-handed enforcement by officials.

A Shanghai resident surnamed Lu said more than 20 million are totally confined to their homes, without external help for domestic chores like emptying septic tanks, fixing broken plumbing or water heating systems, as well as being barred from seeking hospital treatment without a negative PCR test, which can arrive too late for those in urgent need of care.

“There are new issues starting to emerge,” Lu said. “For example, a friend of mine’s Wifi has been down for the past two weeks, so it’s been tough on them, staying at home.”

“Yesterday, a friend’s water heater broke down, and another friend’s refrigerator the day before that, and another’s gas stove,” she said. “No-one came out to repair these things because the whole of Shanghai is shut down.”

Online complaints have also pointed to garbage piling up in residential areas and overflowing septic tanks, while frail and elderly people have been forced to wait out the lockdown at home, alone.

CCP leader Xi Jinping has repeatedly insisted on a zero-COVID approach, despite the ongoing outbreak, with officials warning that allowing the virus to rage unchecked through an under-resourced healthcare system and a sparsely vaccinated elderly age group could cause millions of deaths.

But political commentators say Xi, who is seeking approval from party ranks for an unprecedented third term in office later this year, has staked his political reputation on the policy, and is unable to back down without admitting personal and political failure.

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

Uyghur Human Rights Activist Condemns Death…

A Bangkok court on Thursday sentenced two Uyghur men to death for triggering a bomb explosion which ...
June 12, 2026

Dalai Lama Undergoes Left Knee Surgery…

The Dalai Lama has undergone surgery on his left knee on Monday, his personal physician confirmed.In ...
June 9, 2026

No Vigils: Hong Kong’s Victoria Park…

Hong Kong’s Victoria Park is now much quieter on the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre, ...
June 4, 2026

Exclusive: Tiananmen Victims’ Families Banned from…

Days before the 37th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, several relatives of victims of ...
June 3, 2026

Quad’s Fiji Port Plan Will Challenge…

A plan by the United States, Japan, India and Australia to collaboratively invest in port infrastruc ...
May 30, 2026

Military Buildup Triggers Housing Crisis in…

Housing costs are skyrocketing in Guam due to military buildup and a surge in military personnel in ...
May 29, 2026

Other Article

Pick of the Day

Deputy Executive Director of UNAIDS Press…

Angeli Achrekar, Deputy Executive Director and Global Practice Lead of the Joint United Nations Prog ...
June 13, 2026
Bizzare News

In North Carolina, Woman Dies After…

A 63-year old woman died after being struck by her own vehicle. It happened on on June 10 night in t ...
June 12, 2026
Pet Corner

Perro de Presa Canario Dog Breed

Originating in the Canary Islands, Perro de Presa Canario, known as the Dogo Canario, is a robust an ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Security Vulnerability

A vulnerability is a weakness that attackers can use to access a computer system without authorizati ...
News & Views

Uyghur Human Rights Activist Condemns Death…

A Bangkok court on Thursday sentenced two Uyghur men to death for triggering a bomb explosion which ...
Pick of the Day

Launch Event of Muscat Plan of…

Mohammed bin Said Al Mamari, Minister of Endowments and Religious Affairs of Oman, addresses the lau ...

Top