University World News
08 September 2010 


Study Abroad
English courses in London
Spanish courses in Spain
French courses in France
Italian courses in Italy
German courses in Germany
English courses in UK
English courses in USA
Peer-to-peer learning
Language learning guide
* Sponsored links

Global Edition
Home
Special Report
News
Business
Features
Science Scene
HE Research and Commentary
Academic Freedom
People
Uni-Lateral
U-Say
World Round-up
Special Global Edition
Home
UNESCO Forum – Changing Dynamics
Africa Edition
Home
Africa
News
Features
HE Research and Commentary
Business
People
Uni-Lateral
World Round-up
Special Africa Edition
Home
Differentiation - Issue 0001
Race & SA Universities - Issue 0002

Eduniversal


Archives

Find an Article
Advanced Search

View Archives by Country

View Archived Editions:
* Global Edition
* Africa Edition
* Special Africa Edition

Higher

Useful

Information
Free Registration
About Us
Contact Us
Advertising
Terms and Conditions
The South African government has decided to roll out easy-to-read school workbooks. But it could be wasting millions, researchers say. See the News section.
The South African government has decided to roll out easy-to-read school workbooks. But it could be wasting millions, researchers say. See the News section.

Frances Woolley of Carleton University in Canada looks at the impact of a new US higher education act on the textbook market. See the Commentary section.
Frances Woolley of Carleton University in Canada looks at the impact of a new US higher education act on the textbook market. See the Commentary section.

The Census of Marine Life project has published an inventory of species distribution and diversity in 25 ocean areas. See our Science Scene section.
The Census of Marine Life project has published an inventory of species distribution and diversity in 25 ocean areas. See our Science Scene section.


CHET


FORD





  



IRAQ: Government suspends university after protests
18 October 2009
Issue: 0097



Iraq's prime minister suspended classes and banned political activities at one of Baghdad's top universities following student protests on campus, a government spokesman said last week, writes Sameer N Yacoub for Associated Press. Iraq also banned the student union at Mustansiriyah University, raising questions over Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's commitment to free speech.

The government maintains the university was falling under the sway of religious Shiite groups. Studies at the university were suspended for one week, spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said in a statement posted on a government website. Al-Dabbagh said the action was taken because of problems caused by "undisciplined individuals". The statement did not provide any further details.

The university has been at the centre of a power struggle between al-Maliki and religious Shiite parties, which have had administrative control of the university since the 2003 US-led invasion. Earlier last week, a small number students demanded a role in governing the university, a protest that led al-Maliki to temporarily close the campus.
Full report on the Associated Press site

Printable version
Email to a friend
Comment on this article

Disclaimer: All reader responses posted on this site are those of the reader ONLY and NOT those of University World News or Higher Education Web Publishing, their associated trademarks, websites and services. University World News or Higher Education Web Publishing does not necessarily endorse, support, sanction, encourage, verify or agree with any comments, opinions or statements or other content provided by readers.







  


Related Links
About University World
Other articles from Iraq
More World Round-up
Newsletter Archives

Most Popular Articles
SOUTH AFRICA: Student drop-out rates alarming

CHINA: Chinese students to dominate world market

SOUTH AFRICA: Universities set priorities for research

FRANCE: Smallest university created

UK: Few surprises in new THES rankings

UK: Two centuries of honours degrees to disappear

OECD: Worldwide ‘obsession’ with league tables

AUSTRALIA: Free tuition to lure foreign postgraduates

OECD 1: US share of foreign students drops

AUSTRALIA: Research quality scheme scrapped
Copyright University World News 2007-2010