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fredag 13. mai 2016

Nordic Council to end support for Belarusian university in exile



mokslo_metu_pradzia_mazos_72_542cf9a438c0aThe Nordic Council of Ministers is bringing its support for the Belarusian university in exile to an end.








On May 10 the Nordic Council of Ministers decided
that it will no longer provide funding to Lithuanian-based European
Humanities University (EHU). The decision is a result of the Council of
Ministers’ budget restructuring to free up funds for co-operation on the
integration of refugees and immigrants this year, their statement reads.
According to the donors, the decision to stop funding
EHU is also based on the outcome of a process in which the role and
strategy of the university has been up for discussion. Repeated internal divisions at EHU have also detracted from its activities in recent years, they stress. Watch our video in English:

The decision might have also stemmed from a number of scandals in the EHU, in particular, the recent appointment of its Rector.
Moreover, the Nordic Council commissioned an audit of its financial
activity of the University which disclosed alleged misconduct by the
current administration, the newspaper Nasha Niva reports.
The issue of the future of the university will be on the agenda at June’s meeting of the Governing Board, Dzyanis Kuchynski, the president of the EHU Student Union, told svaboda.org.
According to him, the decision to stop supporting the university may be
the result of the long-term uncertainty about the university
leadership.
“The question is whether other donors will agree to
provide funding, or whether, for example, the European Commission or
SIDA will increase it,” Kuchynski said.

Read also: New Rector of Belarusian university in exile plans tuition hikes?

Founded in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, in 1992,
soon after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the European Humanities
University was one of the few private, nonprofit liberal-arts
institutions in the country.
But in 2004, Belarusian officials shut it down after
it stood up against attempts to undermine its academic freedom. In
response, a small team of faculty members and administrators set up a
“university in exile” across the border in neighboring Lithuania.
The Nordic Council of Ministers has been one of the biggest donors since 2008.

Read also: Soviet heyday: Rector of Belarus university-in-exile to be elected on the Q.T?

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