Honorific Prefix: | Ir Prof |
Alexander Wai | |
Native Name: | Chinese: 衞炳江 |
Native Name Lang: | zh |
Office: | 6th President and Vice-Chancellor of the Hong Kong Baptist University |
Term Start: | 1 February 2021 |
Chancellor: | Carrie Lam |
Succeeding: | Roland Chin |
Predecessor: | Roland Chin |
Office2: | Deputy President and Provost of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University |
Term Start2: | 1 March 2020 |
Term End2: | 30 November 2020 |
Chancellor2: | Carrie Lam |
President2: | Teng Jin-guang |
Predecessor2: | Philip Chan |
Successor2: | Wing-tak Wong[1] |
Office3: | Vice President (Research Development) of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University |
Term Start3: | 1 July 2010 |
Term End3: | 29 February 2020 |
Chancellor3: | Leung Chun-ying, Carrie Lam |
President3: | Timothy W. Tong, Teng Jin-guang |
Education: | University of Hong Kong (BSc) University of Maryland, College Park (PhD) |
Website: | Biography (archive) |
Alexander Wai Ping-kong (Chinese: 衞炳江) is a former Deputy President and Provost of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, who served from 1 March 2020.[2] He had served the Hong Kong Polytechnic University for over 20 years since 1996. He assumed the position of President and Vice-Chancellor of the Hong Kong Baptist University on 1 February 2021.[3] [4]
In late July 2021, at his first press conference since taking up his position at Baptist University and slightly over a year after the enactment of the Hong Kong National Security Law, Wai said that the university had no plans to limit research on areas such as Hong Kong independence and human rights abuses in Xinjiang; management would not advocate their colleagues breaking the law, however. At the same time, Baptist University together with at least two other public universities in Hong Kong introduced mandatory undergraduate education on national security in the form of seminars and talks.[5]
In November 2019, during the Siege of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University which marked an escalation of the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests, Wai, who was vice-president of the university at the time, visited the campus together with council chairman Lam Tai-fai and fellow vice-president Ben Young. As they were reaching the communal building, they were stopped by a student who complained about the management figures having failed in their duties by not helping the students. When Wai was told to help clean the kitchen whose cleanliness he had criticized in response, he agreed and cleaned the kitchen for around 30 minutes.[6]