糖心Vlog

World in brief - 10 July 2014

Published on
July 10, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

United States
Idaho arms campus safety officers

Idaho State University has armed its public safety officers with guns for the first time in response to a new state law allowing people with 鈥渃oncealed-carry permits鈥 to have firearms on campuses, which came into effect last week. 鈥淥ur objective is to maintain a safe and secure campus environment,鈥 said Steve Chatterton, the college鈥檚 director of public safety. 鈥淲e are increasing our officers鈥 capabilities to respond.鈥 Colorado, Kansas, Mississippi, Oregon, Utah and Wisconsin have also allowed concealed weapons on university campuses.

Finland
Fee charges trial nears end

The end of a trial period running from 2010 to 2014 in which select Finnish universities charged fees for some non-European Union students on master鈥檚 degree courses is due to come to an end on 31 December. Although this means that 鈥渢here are no tuition fees charged in Finnish higher education degrees starting in autumn 2014鈥, reported the Study in Finland website recently, it also stressed that 鈥渘o [final] tuition fee decisions have yet been made, either for or against鈥.

Bangladesh
Corruption? Our for-profits are clean, says minister

Bangladesh鈥檚 government has reacted angrily to a report on alleged corruption at private universities. Transparency International Bangladesh, an anti-corruption non-governmental organisation, recently published a study claiming that private universities are involved in 鈥渋llegal money鈥 transactions, involving procedures ranging from admissions to degree awards. However, Nurul Islam Nahid, the education minister, told the country鈥檚 parliament: 鈥淭his is a baseless report prepared to tarnish the image of the government.鈥

Guyana
Banks may manage student loans in repayments drive

Budget cuts in Guyana are hitting students hard as the government has launched a student loan repayment crackdown. Ashni Singh, finance minister, is concerned that the current level of repayment is 鈥渦nsatisfactory鈥 and is planning more stringent action to ensure greater compliance. Jacob Opadeyi, the University of Guyana vice-chancellor, reportedly wants banks to be responsible for managing loans, believing they are better equipped to collect debt. He is now in talks with government ministers on the matter.

Iraq
Institutions 鈥榦verwhelmed鈥 by ISIS militants

Reports from Iraq say universities have been overrun by members of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS). The northern and western parts of the country have been most affected, with the universities of Anbar, Mosul and Tikrit being targeted. Government helicopters last week landed at the University of Tikrit and fierce fighting between state forces and rebels took place. Reports suggest that academics have been stuck in Mosul since June and that ISIS forced students and lecturers out of Anbar.

Australia
Foreign students to fuel immigration surge

Overseas students are likely to be the main driving force behind a sharp rise in immigration to Australia over the next few years. The country鈥檚 Department of Immigration and Border Protection has estimated that international students鈥 right to work for at least two years after graduation, which was introduced last year, will see student departures fall, before rising to a projected 35,000 a year by 2018. There will be an estimated 123,000 student arrivals in that year.

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