0940 Hrs GMT
London
Thursday
11 November 2010.
Editor © Muhammad Haque.
AADHIKAROnline evidentially republishing the texts from an online report by the DAILY TELEGRAPH that shows the fundamental hypocrisy and stupidity of David Cameron’s CONDEM CUTS confidence tricks.
The idiocies of the CONDEM ‘economics’ are obvious in the evidence emerging daily of how they are destroying society. The attacks on communities like the East London borough of Tower Hamlets are calculated to cause serious immediate and long-term dislocation, distribution and destitution.
We shall be examining that evidence here and on associated AADHIKARonline blogs and web sites every day.
Here is the piece from the London DAILY TELEGRAPH that shows how ignorant and dishonest the CONDEM regime is:
[To be continued]
“David Cameron: 'Raising university tuition fees could cut cost for foreigners'
David Cameron has suggested that sharp rises in university tuition fees would make studying in Britain more affordable for overseas students.
By Murray Wardrop and Rosa Prince 6:30AM GMT 11 Nov 2010
During a visit to China, the Prime Minister said Government plans to lift the cap on fees for British students would mean foreigners could be charged less.
Prime Minister David Cameron visits the Great Wall during the trade mission in Beijing
British students currently pay significantly lower fees than overseas youngsters who want to take degrees here. However, the cap for British students could be lifted from around £3,000 to a maximum of £9,000 a year under planned reforms.
Following a speech to students at Peking University, Mr Cameron was asked how his Government would be able to attract "excellent international students" following the changes.
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Mr Cameron replied: “In the past, we have pushed up the fees on overseas students as a way of keeping them down for domestic students.
"Yes, foreign students will still pay a significant amount of money, but we should be able to bring that growth under control.
"We won't go on increasing so fast the fees of the overseas students.”
Meanwhile, in the House of Commons, Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat Deputy Prime Minister, admitted that he and his party broke a promise to voters over student tuition fees.
Standing in for David Cameron at Prime Minister's Question Time, he conceded that he had "not been able to deliver the policy that we held in opposition" after abandoning a pledge to scrap university fees altogether.
Instead, the Liberal Democrats last week signed up to Coalition plans to allow institutions to charge up to £9,000 a year.
Mr Clegg made his admission as student protesters outside Parliament waved placards accusing him of "conning" voters.
Harriet Harman, Labour's deputy leader, claimed that Mr Clegg had "hawked" his way around university campuses seeking student votes ahead of the general election, but had since been "led astray" by the Conservatives in the Coalition Government.
Accusing Mr Clegg of "going along with Tory plans to shove the cost of higher education on to students and their families," she joked: "We all know what it's like: you are at freshers' week, you meet up with a dodgy bloke and you do things that you regret.
"Isn't it true he has been led astray by the Tories, isn't that the truth of it?"
The Liberal Democrat leader responded: "This is an extraordinarily difficult issue and I have been entirely open about the fact that we have not been able to deliver the policy that we held in opposition.
"Because of the financial situation, because of the compromises of the Coalition Government, we have had to put forward a different policy.
"We have stuck to our ambition to make sure that going to university is done in a progressive way so that those people who are presently discouraged from going to university – bright people from poor backgrounds, discouraged by the system we inherited from her government – are able to do so."
Mr Clegg added that the Government's proposals would see higher earners paying "over the odds" for their education.
Under the plans, outlined last week, successful graduates would be forced to repay student loans at higher rates of interest than those on low incomes.
Mr Clegg said: "The proposals we have put forward will mean that those who earn the least will pay much less than they do at the moment, those who earn the most will pay over the odds to provide a subsidy to allow people from poor backgrounds to go to university."
Asked whether he would accept an invitation from the NUS to meet the protesters, the Deputy Prime Minister declined, saying that he met students regularly.
The Liberal Democrats have incurred the wrath of the demonstrators because all of the party's MPs signed a National Union of Students pledge to abolish tuition fees before the election in May.
Under the terms of the Coalition Agreement, the Lib Dems are permitted to abstain over the issue, and a number are expected to rebel when the proposal comes before the House of Commons.
As the demonstrations turned into riots, Martin Horwood, Liberal Democrat MP for Cheltenham, was called a "liar" by angry protesters after coming out to address the crowd.
He confirmed that he would not support the new £9,000 tuition fee cap, telling the students: "You don't know that I've lied about anything."
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