CLOSED BELARUSIAN UNIVERSITY OPENS 'VIRTUAL' BRANCH IN LITHUANIA
Published:
5 November 2004 y., Friday
The European Humanities University (EHU), which was closed by Belarusian authorities in July, has registered a "virtual" educational division in the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius.
The new educational initiative, called EHU-international, will start its via-the-Internet tuition for a projected group of 200 students later this month. EHU Deputy Rector Tatsyana Halko told that the EHU-international is negotiating with education officials in Italy, Germany, Poland, and Lithuanian to have its future baccalaureates recognized by these countries. After the closure of the EHU, some 200 students reportedly left Belarus to continue their education abroad, including in Poland, Germany, and the United States. Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka said in September that the authorities closed the private EHU because the university's main goal was to educate a new Belarusian elite that would make the nation pro-Western.
Šaltinis:
RFE/RL's Belarus Service
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
New application rules and accounting procedures for EU research funding.
more »
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory has produced never-seen-before high-resolution pictures of the sun.
more »
The King Tut exhibition opens in New York's Times Square.
more »
On 16 April the European Economic and Social Committee will host a day-long mock plenary session attended by over one hundred secondary school students and their teachers from the 27 EU countries.
more »
It's one thing to agree on new laws, implementing them is another, often complicated, issue. Until now the European Commission's implementation of much EU legislation was overseen by committees of Member State experts, through the so-called “comitology” system, which was criticised for its lack of transparency and democratic oversight.
more »
Monday was supposed to be the first day of school in Haiti. At the Lycee Marie-Jeanne public school in Port-au-Prince, students turn up with freshly-pressed uniforms and buffed shoes only to be turned away by their principal.
more »
The 27 winners of the EU’s 2009 translation competition receive awards for their language skills.
more »
The 27 national winners of the European Charlemagne Youth Prize 2010 have been named.
more »
In a classroom of seventh-grade students divided equally between girls and boys, Tim Sophanny, a 30-year-old teacher at Sre Preah Secondary School in Keo Seima district of Mondulkiri, is writing the lesson on a dark-green board with one hand while covering her nose with the other to avoid inhaling chalk dust.
more »
The European Commission’s Budget Directorate-General is asking pupils aged between 15 and 19 from Germany and Austria to have a close look at the EU budget and submit their findings in the form of a report or short video.
more »