As campus crumbles and students flee, Venezuela’s main university struggles to survive COVID-19

As campus crumbles and students flee, Venezuela’s main university struggles to survive COVID-19

Chairs are seen at the Aula Magna of the Central University of Venezuela (UCV), in Caracas, Venezuela. September 25, 2020. Photo: Fausto Torrealba – Reuters

 

The corridors are empty and silent at the Central University of Venezuela (UCV), the country’s oldest and largest institution of higher education, as the COVID-19 pandemic has forced the evacuation of its 32,000 students.

By Yahoo News – Vivian Sequera, Reuters

Oct 7, 2020

The 298-year-old university is suffering not only the impact of the coronavirus quarantine, but also a six-year economic crisis that has left it struggling with a meager budget and the emigration of 30% of its graduates.





The deterioration of its infrastructure stood out in June with the partial collapse of the roof of an outdoor walkway that is a part of the iconic architecture of the complex, which has been recognized by UNESCO as a world heritage site.

The institution’s troubles signal that Venezuela risks losing a generation of college graduates, potentially leaving it without the human resources to rebuild a nation where most of the professionals are now in the diaspora.

Many students simply get their degrees and leave the country, said rector Cecilia Garcia.

“It’s bleeding out,” she said.

As the number of students declines, some professors make just $1.50 a month, Garcia said.

“The deterioration is general,” said David Sosa, president of the UCV student federation, walking through corridors dotted with leaky roofs and broken cobblestones.

“It is disappointing that we have to sit and wait for other countries to develop solutions, vaccines (for coronavirus), when we in Venezuela have historically had first-class universities,” Sosa said.

Venezuelan doctor and scientist Jacinto Convit, who created a vaccine for leprosy, graduated from the UCV, said Victor Marquez, head of the university’s association of professors.

A government that destroys a fundamental element of social development, such as education … is creating a terrible future for the nation,” said Marquez.

Sosa and Márquez said that because the UCV did not support the government, authorities applied financial “asphyxia” by limiting its budget. The government says the school is leading a leftist revolution.

The information ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

Read More: Yahoo News – As campus crumbles and students flee, Venezuela’s main university struggles to survive COVID-19

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