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Portuguese School of Luanda denies alleged threats to Portuguese for the arrival of the virus

The Portuguese School of Luanda denied the news reported by the portuguese newspaper Jornal de Notícias that the portuguese in Angola were afraid to go out on the streets because they were being threatened and blamed for the arrival of Covid-19 in the country.

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In the news, the portuguese newspaper revealed that a portuguese teacher at the Portuguese School in Luanda had been attacked on Saturday - the day the first cases of Covid-19 in the country were confirmed - in a supermarket in the capital. The school's executive director, Luís Silva, said the reports in the news were "completely" false and revealed that the case in fact concerned an Angolan woman who "was assaulted in a parking lot", but not for the reasons illustrated in the Jornal de Notícias article.

According to the responsible, quoted by Novo Jornal, the woman will have been assaulted because of a parking space.

Luís Silva also said that he followed the case closely and that the victim did not suffer a head trauma, as it was previously revealed. "The lady was seen at the Alvalade clinic and is fine", he added.

He also denied that the Portuguese School in Luanda is behind in its salaries and confirmed that there are "in fact" teachers who want to return to Portugal: "In a universe of 140 teachers, there are only five who have expressed this desire".

Despite the troubled times facing the country and the world, Luís Silva assured that he received no complaints from teachers about threats or aggression.

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