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Australian Students Offered 2500 Places at ANU for 2021

US Will Ask WHO ‘Tough Questions’ Over How They Were ‘So Wrong’ About Virus From China: Pence

The United States will ask the World Health Organization “tough questions” over the international body’s handling of the CCP virus, Vice President Mike Pence promised. The organization (WHO) is closely aligned with China and has repeatedly parroted talking points promoted by China’s ruling regime. The CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as novel coronavirus, emerged in China last year before spreading around the world. The party manipulated information about the outbreak, tried silencing insiders who spoke out, and railed against world leaders, including U.S. President Donald Trump. Pence said Trump “believes in accountability” and noted American taxpayers are the largest funding source for WHO, which is part of the United Nations. While U.S. funding for WHO will likely continue, “that doesn’t mean that at the right time in the future…

Australian Students Offered 2500 Places at ANU for 2021

Canberra—The Australian National University (ANU) will be accepting 2,500 Australian school-leavers next year based on their year 11 results from April 9 until May 25, 2020.

The change comes after many graduating students have had their exams and assessments interrupted by the CCP Virus “CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as novel coronavirus.”

The prediction comes as universities confront an uncertain future for domestic enrolments, and the figure is roughly equivalent to recent intakes.

ANU Vice-Chancellor Professor Brian Schmidt said in a video statement that 2020 was not “panning out how any of us expected” and that this “will provide thousands of school-leavers from all across the nation with certainty in uncertain times.”

Offers of university placements will also be sent out earlier in August, with the hope being that this will allow students to prepare and plan for university next year.

The peak body for the sector, Universities Australia (UA), said on April 7 that Australia’s universities were facing a steep revenue decline owing to the reduction in international students for the second semester. It estimated the loss would be between AU$3–$4.6 billion ($1.9–2.5 billion).

Universities Australia Chief Executive Catriona Jackson said in the same statement that universities around Australia may lose 21,000 jobs in the next 6 months or more if the pandemic lockdown continues. A report by Professional Services firm Deloitte Australia commissioned by UA estimated that the university sector brings in AU$41 billion ($25 billion) in revenue for Australia.

Overseas Enrollments Down, Financial Pain Coming

The loss of international students has walloped the sector. In 2019 Australian universities gave 720,000 spots to overseas students, with the largest group coming from China.

Salvatore Babones, a researcher from the University of Sydney, released a study in 2019 detailing how Australian universities were relying far too much on overseas enrolments. He argued if the sector did not stop, “Australian universities would be hard-pressed to meet their financial and moral obligations to creditors and employees.”

Detailing how his employer generated more than half a billion dollars in annual revenue from Chinese student fees in 2017. Babones noted that universities need to stop pursuing international students, or they will be “a risk to Australian governments” and ultimately to Australians themselves.

Universities are also aware of the dangers faced by opening themselves up to large numbers of international students. In 2019 the Australian National University suffered a huge data breach by Chinese hackers that had been going on for 19 years. While in Queensland, universities saw increasing interference from Chinese international student groups.

In response to the difficulties the Australian government set up a taskforce to monitor and stop further interference.

This article is from the Internet:Australian Students Offered 2500 Places at ANU for 2021

Canada’s Health Agency Says 22,000 Could Die Even With Strong Control Measures

OTTAWA—Canada could see the end of the first wave of the COVID-19 epidemic before autumn, according to federal projections, but only if strong physical distancing measures are strictly maintained the whole time. Even in that best-case scenario, the federal public health agency projects that 4,400 to 44,000 Canadians could die of COVID-19 in the coming months. If those containment measures are relaxed or abandoned, the death toll could be much, much higher, the agency says. “These stark numbers tell us that we must do everything that we can now to stay in that best-case scenario,” said chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam, in releasing the national projections Thursday morning in Ottawa. Canada can’t prevent every death, but it must prevent every death that it can, she said. The agency…