In the media

In the media

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1-3 of 3 results

  • Newspaper

    Libya’s Ministry of Education has 600,000 employees, but only 180,000 actually teach

    Libya

    Press

    Sami Zaptia - Libya Herald

    Libya’s Ministry of Education employs 600,000 people, but only 180,000 are active teachers, highlighting inefficiencies in the system. The acting Education Minister plans to introduce a “class allowance” to reward teachers who actually teach. Investigations also revealed widespread corruption in the printing and distribution of schoolbooks, with costs nearly halved by producing them locally.

  • Newspaper

    Committee to probe alleged scholarship irregularities

    Libya

    Press

    Wagdy Sawahel - University World News

    A ministerial committee has been appointed to investigate alleged regulatory violations in the awarding of state-funded national and international scholarships to Libyan students. The Administrative Control Authority has suspended the allocation of full state scholarships until all financial obligations to the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research are settled. Meanwhile, the Higher Committee for Academic Scholarships will review past decisions to assess their compliance with legislation and monitor scholarship recipients.

  • Newspaper

    Libyan government faces new corruption scandal over overseas study scholarships

    Libya

    Press

    Salim Hanafi - Watan

    The outgoing Prime Minister and Education Minister of Libya have been accused of corruption in the allocation of overseas study scholarships. Allegedly, scholarship decisions involved 6,000 undeserving students, many of whom were children of government officials and influential figures. Some names were reportedly added to lists of war-wounded and missing persons, highlighting the severity of the case. While the Education Minister has denied the accusations, the scandal has sparked public outrage over the misuse of national resources.

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