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Hong Kong university expresses regret after lecturer refuses to bend online exam rules for student in Myanmar The Education University of Hong Kong in Tai Po. Photo: Roy Issa
A Hong Kong university has expressed deep regret after a lecturer refused to make flexible arrangements over an online exam for a student in Myanmar who pointed to internet blackouts enforced by the military following a coup two months ago.
The humanities student, who studies at the Education University of Hong Kong and had been taking virtual lessons, said her lecturer dismissed her concerns over attending the exam after the Easter holiday in April, citing fairness concerns.
It found that most of that relief - about US$6.2 billion - went to Angola and was provided by the China Development Bank (CDB) and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC). Angola has received about a third of all the loans advanced by China to African nations in the past two decades. The analysis was carried out by researchers at the China Africa Research Initiative (CARI) at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Get.
Lee Ping-hei and Lee Tsz-hang, who each served three months for their roles in the beating, were returned to jail on Wednesday after their original jail terms were extended to 10 months each.
US rejects Hong Kong request for WTO panel over ‘Made in China’ labelling row
Hong Kong requested a dispute settlement panel over US decision to force the city’s locally made goods to be labelled ‘Made in China’
US rejection cited change in administration, with row simmering since Donald Trump removed Hong Kong’s special trading status last summer