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    16
    Jan
    2013
    6:51pm, EST

    Syrian death toll soars with college blasts, triple car bombings

    Syria closed universities and suspended classes for college students across the country today as anti-regime activists reported the death toll from two massive blasts that ravaged a campus in Aleppo reached 87. The opposition and the government have blamed each other for the explosions, which marked a major escalation in the struggle for control of Aleppo -- Syria's largest city and once the country's main commercial hub. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    The day after a deadly attack on a Syrian university, the State Department issued a statement saying it was appalled – and blamed the attack on President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

    The State Department statement relays information from eyewitnesses at the scene, who said the regime “launched aerial strikes in the vicinity of university facilities.”

    The United Nations said that if the attack -- which reportedly killed 80 people, most of them students taking exams, was launched by the government -- Assad’s government would be guilty of war crimes against civilians.  

    Assad’s government denies the attack, Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zouabi told NBC’s Bill Neely. He said al-Qaida is connected with the explosions. 

    “It’s their trademark,” al-Zouabi said. He said the massacre was intended to lay blame on the government, portraying it as unable to protect its students. He said the government had “absolutely nothing” to do with the bombing.   

    The State Department statement further condemned Assad’s government: “Our sympathies and condolences go out to all those devastated by this senseless tragedy, which is only the latest in a long stream of losses inflicted by the Assad regime on its own people.”

    The university, located in Damascas, had been abandoned for many months, Guardian reporter Martin Chulov told NPR’s All Things Considered. A relative normalcy had returned to the city, as had a fresh infusion of food. The bombing changed that. 

    10 comments

    This conflict is a repeat of the 30 years war fought in Germany 300 years ago. The sectarian proxy conflict has too many similarities. The main difference is that the religion is Islam and the weapons are modern. Germany was ravaged, and so too will be Syria. This latest University bombing has all t …

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    Explore related topics: college, syria, students, bashar-assad, featured, aleppo
  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    4:48am, EDT

    Slaughtered 'one by one': Gunmen kill at least 25 at Nigeria college residence

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    KADUNA, Nigeria -- Gunmen shot dead at least 25 students in an attack on their college residence in northeast Nigeria, authorities said.

    The overnight attack took place at the Federal Polytechnic Mubi in remote Adamawa state late on Monday, the head of the information department at the college told Reuters.

    "The killers went from room to room, slaughtering them one by one," said witness Mohammed Awal, who was not harmed in the attack. Some were shot, others killed with machetes, he said.

    Citing local residents, Voice of America reported that the victims were "individually questioned before being attacked."

    Political feud?
    Adamawa state, like much of the north, has been targeted by Islamist insurgents, but police were also investigating whether the killings might have been motivated by a political feud inside the college.

    "We learned that when they came for the attack, they called out the names of some of the victims and killed them as they came out. Some they left alone, which gives us a clue that this was the work of insiders," Adamawa police spokesman Mohammed Ibrahim said. He put the toll confirmed by police at 25.

    He said the student halls had been raided by police last week as part of a sweep against Boko Haram militants. During the raid, police recovered weapons including a rocket-propelled grenade, dozens of homemade bombs, knives and automatic assault rifles. He added that it could not be ruled out that Boko Haram militants who had infiltrated the students were behind it.

    A security source and several witnesses put the overall death toll from the attack at 40.

    Voice of America added: 

    Daniel Babayi, the executive secretary of the Northern States Christian Association of Nigeria, says he believes the killings were a reprisal attack after 156 people were arrested and accused of being members of the Islamist militant group known as Boko Haram late last month.

    The Boko Haram Islamist sect, which usually targets politicians or security forces, has also attacked students in the past and has cells in Adamawa. Security sources believe it has infiltrated several institutions, including colleges.

    More international stories from NBC News


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    But police were also investigating the possibility that the killings were related to a dispute between rival political groups at the college over a student union election on Sunday, in a part of Nigeria that is awash with weapons.

    Colleges across the country are sometimes plagued by armed gangs and vigilante groups.

    "The crisis in Mubi is suspected to have been fueled by campus politics after the election ... the ones who were disgruntled might have ... (carried out) the attack," said National Emergency Management Agency spokesman Yushua Shuaib.

    More Nigeria coverage from NBC News

    Boko Haram is widely considered to be the biggest security threat in Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil exporter. It has been blamed for more than 1,000 deaths since its insurgency -- which aims to carve out an Islamic state out of northern Nigeria -- intensified in 2010.

    Boko Haram's purported leader released a video on Monday in which he vowed to continue fighting and said no peace talks with the government could happen while military raids against sect members continued.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    • Images: Inside Syria with Ann Curry
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    • Death threats force Afghan actress into hiding
    • In Iran, sanctions bite and currency collapses
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    227 comments

    Will Islamics who don't agree with these militants stand up against them in the streets, protesting, burning black flags, and destroying? Or is that activity reserved for offensive videos and cartoons?

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    Explore related topics: college, nigeria, attack, africa, featured, boko-haram
  • 26
    Sep
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    Lessons from abroad: Bulgaria pioneers new approach to ranking universities

    Courtesy of the Bulgarian Ministry of Education

    Sergei Ignatov, Bulgarian minister of education, has been pushing independent governing boards and outside accreditation for the nation's colleges and universities.

    By Tom Marshall, The Hechinger Report

    SOFIA, Bulgaria — Petar Stanchev is the kind of student Bulgaria needs to keep. Last year, according to the country’s Association of Private Universities, more than half of its college-bound students applied to institutions abroad.


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    The 23-year-old planned to remain in this mountainous, verdant patch of southeastern Europe. For two years, working toward a bachelor’s degree in journalism, he showed up for classes in sociology and media at the prestigious Sofia University. The problem was, his teachers didn’t.

    “I had a French teacher who didn’t come to lectures for weeks as though it was normal,” he said. “There were whole groups of us who were waiting for a lecturer who didn’t even bother to send us an email or let us know.” Finally, last spring, Stanchev got so fed up that he left home for university in the United Kingdom.

    Such problems have sparked a fiery struggle over the future of higher education here. Sergei Ignatov, the brash education minister of Bulgaria’s center-right government, is pushing a raft of market-based reforms aimed at raising quality, shining a light on moribund university programs, and stemming the tide of departing students. His most ambitious initiative is an online university ranking system, which allows students to figure out which programs will help them succeed in the job market.


    “I think this is the most transparent and clearly structured university ranking system I’ve ever come across,” said the late Cyrus Reed, former provost of the American University in Bulgaria. “It’s really a major step forward.”

    Bulgaria’s neighbors are also experimenting with different approaches to improve their higher-education systems. In Romania, the government placed video cameras in high-school exam rooms to combat cheating. Under the camera’s watchful eye, passing rates on the university entrance exam plunged from 81 percent in 2009 to an all-time low of 45 percent in 2011. At South East European University in Macedonia, each professor and staff member is critiqued annually under a rigorous quality control system. Bulgaria, which joined the European Union five years ago, has earned the most praise, however, including a mostly laudatory report from the World Bank.

    Q&A: How are Bulgarian universities trying to move past Soviet-style teaching?

    Still, Ignatov’s efforts have not been wholly welcomed. Critics fear that he wants to fully privatize the 274,000-student system, which includes 37 public and 14 private institutions. Protesters have haunted his three-year tenure, even carrying a black coffin with a mummy made to look like him. The stress, Ignatov said, made his hair fall out.

    Bulgarians have reason to distrust the free market, which has offered it a bruising ride since the fall of Communism in 1989. The country escaped the wars that accompanied the break-up of its western neighbor, Yugoslavia, but its economic output plummeted. According to World Bank data, per capita GDP fell from $1,845 in 1988 to $1,373 in 1997, measured in constant dollars.

    It took 15 years for GDP to climb back to its 1988 level, only to plunge again with the global economy in 2008. Even as budgets dried up and infrastructure crumbled, university enrollment rates have more than doubled since 1990. “All the quality of education in Bulgaria was destroyed,” Ignatov said of the post-Communist years. “We lost a lot of ground.”

    U.S. businesses look abroad
    In the late 20th century, Eastern Europe’s longest-serving ruler, Todor Zhivkov, presided over Bulgaria when its university system was a point of national pride. Tuition was free, entrance exams were tough, and the nation gained a reputation for technical excellence. Its graduates helped build the Eastern bloc’s first generation of personal computers, while the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences worked on satellite equipment and prepared cosmonauts for outer space.

    Hewlett-Packard was sufficiently impressed with the country’s talent pool that in 2006 it opened a global support center here, the Bulgarian capital. The company needed 4,000 highly trained employees, so it forged relationships with three universities, including the public Sofia University, training professors and building state-of-the-art computer labs. High-performing instructors earned bonuses and the company hired many students right out of college.

    Read more education analysis at The Hechinger Report

    One of them was Ivan Ivaylo, who was hired as an HP service delivery manager and program lecturer in 2008 following his graduation from Sofia University. There was initial skepticism about dropping Soviet-style lectures to learn from companies. Ivaylo recalled, “We had senior management from the university coming to see with their own eyes that this was working.”

    The results are clear: To date, the classes have trained more than 1,000 students, with other companies like Microsoft Corp. and Cisco Systems, Inc. developing similar programs. They have helped Bulgaria become a magnet for high-tech outsourcing.


    Follow @hechingerreport

    Sasha Bezuhanova, director of HP’s public-sector operations for Central and Eastern Europe, is eager to demonstrate the model’s potential. She envisions “an entire ecosystem around innovation” in which Bulgarian universities conduct research and companies like HP turn the results into marketable products — much as happens in Silicon Valley.

    But here, too, are obstacles. Under Communist-era regulations, the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences — not universities — held responsibility for high-end research. Last year, Ignatov got the law changed and began transferring funds to universities.

    But many students, including Stanchev, object to the move. “Why would we basically destroy the Academy of Sciences, which has many successful projects?” he asked. “Create the environment for research, but don’t destroy something that’s already working.”

    Rankings use tax, employment data
    Ignatov is not afraid to challenge the status quo. He defends much-criticized university fee increases that were pushed through parliament without discussion. He dismantled a Soviet-era government commission that until 2010 held exclusive power to award doctoral degrees and professorships. Under the commission’s watch, one applicant returned from England bearing a newly minted degree from the University of Oxford, only to be informed he had to prove that such a university existed.

    Ignatov is also pushing university rectors to set up independent governing boards and seek outside accreditation, rather than rely solely on a national body that deemed more than 90 percent of Bulgaria’s universities “good” or “very good” in its first round of ratings.

    Ignatov is most proud of the online ranking system, unveiled two years ago. Reed, who served as provost of the American University in Bulgaria until his death from injuries suffered in a car accident in July, characterized the system as miles beyond the popular U.S. News & World Report rankings, because “in this case, they tell you exactly how they got it and they let you manipulate it yourself.” Users can also compare majors and programs according to their own priorities. Looking for professors who show up for class and forge relationships with students? Curious about which biology program is best at helping graduates find jobs? With a few clicks, students can find out.

    More from The Hechinger Report

    • Arizona charter school puts kids in cubicles with computers, test scores rise
    • Program aims to lure next-generation engineers, math whizzes into classroom
    • Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis

    Boyan Zahariev, program director for governance and public policies at the Open Society Foundations, a philanthropy run by George Soros, oversaw the creation of the ranking system. Zahariev’s team was frustrated by what they saw elsewhere: a hodgepodge of surveys that relied on subjective factors like a university’s reputation, rather than more objective measures of quality. Beginning in 2007, they began pursuing what some consider the Holy Grail of university ranking systems: solid information on student earnings following graduation. Armed with a government contract and extra funding from the European Union, they delved into a rich trove of government data on graduates’ tax payments and unemployment status.

    The data don’t include actual salaries or account for graduates who take jobs outside Bulgaria, but they do show which university programs place the most graduates in upper-income brackets within Bulgaria. Such information can be difficult to access in many countries, even among government agencies, Zahariev said. Bulgaria protects privacy by aggregating the data and using an identifying number rather than a student’s name.

    Some universities initially balked at requests for data on class size, library holdings, professor credentials and other factors in the rankings. But they knew they couldn’t stonewall a government project, and institutions often found that some of those details actually improved their rankings, Zahariev said.

    Read more education stories on NBCNews.com

    That information is balanced by 15,000 student surveys administered by an outside research firm. It’s one thing to know the student-teacher ratio or the size of the library collection, but the surveys offer a real-world contrast, said the program coordinator Anita Baikusheva. Does your professor show up for class and make herself available for conferences? How useful is that big library collection?

    The government is already using the ranking system to dole out precious supplemental funding. “My purpose is to introduce this more competitive way of financing universities, from excellent to bad,” Ignatov said. He added that though he doesn’t yet have the legal right to say so, “next year, maybe we’ll start to cut the finances of the bad institutions.”

    Don Westerheijden, an expert on student information systems at the University of Twente in the Netherlands who acted as a consultant on the rankings, believes Bulgaria’s new system deserves a close look by other nations, including the United States. He knows of no other system that uses government tax or employment data to estimate the earning power of a college degree.

    Stanchev, for his part, wishes the rankings had been in place when he was choosing a program — he might have chosen to remain in his native country.

    This story, "Bulgaria pioneers new approach to ranking universities," was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. It is one in a series focused on what the United States can learn about higher education from other countries.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    5 comments

    "Sergei Ignatov, the brash education minister of Bulgaria’s center-right government, is pushing a raft of market-based reforms aimed at raising quality, shining a light on moribund university programs..." My daughter went on a six month foray overseas to study at a French university. Signed up …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college, europe, education, bulgaria, hechinger-report
  • 10
    Sep
    2012
    9:00pm, EDT

    Cram schools boom widens India's class divide

    Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    Students attend class at the Bansal Classes in Kota in India's desert state of Rajasthan, Aug. 13, 2012.

    Reuters reports — With a sprawling five-acre campus, 10,000 students and state-of-the-art LCD projectors in its lecture rooms, Bansal Classes is bigger and slicker than most schools in India.

    But the institution, now a landmark in Kota, a city in the desert state of Rajasthan, is neither a school nor a college. It is the jewel in the crown of India's private coaching industry, a $6.4 billion business that exacerbates the social divide. Full story…

    Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    A student studies in a classroom at the Bansal Classes in Kota in India's desert state of Rajasthan, Aug. 13.

    Ahmad Masood / Reuters

    A student checks his results on a notice board at the Bansal Classes in Kota, in India's desert state of Rajasthan, Aug. 13.

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    1 comment

    India is overpopulated. It is time for drastic action to reduce it.

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    Explore related topics: india, college, world-news, edcation
  • 27
    May
    2012
    8:06am, EDT

    Two Americans held over death of student in Japan after Nicki Minaj concert

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Two Americans have been arrested in connection the death of a female Irish exchange student in Japan, police in Tokyo were reported as saying on Sunday.

    Nicola Furlong, 21, from County Wexford, Ireland, was found unconscious in a hotel room early on Thursday, hours after attending a concert by the rapper Nicki Minaj, the Irish Times said.


    She was later confirmed dead at a hospital, where an autopsy indicated she may have been strangled.

    The Irish Times said Furlong is believed to have gone to Keio Plaza Hotel in Shinjuku, a business and shopping hub in central Tokyo, after midnight with her female friend after the two met the American pair.

    The Daily Yomiuri in Japan said police arrested two American men - a musician, 19, and a dancer, 23 - on suspicion of sexually assaulting Furlong's friend and fellow student, 21, in a taxi on the way to the hotel.

    It said police suspect the men know how Furlong subsequently died.

    The Japan Times said the 19-year-old suspect was alone in a room with Furlong when hotel staff went up to probe a complaint about loud noise.

    None of the reports could be confirmed by msnbc.com.

    Furling was attending Takasaki City University of Economics in Gunma Prefecture.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    197 comments

    Well if these two did it and are found guilty.. "Sayonara" capital punishment in Japan is legal.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, college, student, sex, rape, united-states, featured, crime-courts

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