The information was advanced by the director-general of the National Institute for Scholarship Management (INAGBE), Milton Chivela, who admitted the difficulties that students in Cuba, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Namibia have been experiencing, with subsidies in arrears three months ago, a situation that in other countries not mentioned has been observed for two months.
"INAGBE recognizes that the financial situation that scholarship students are experiencing is not easy, so there is awareness of the negative impact that it has generated in their life," said Milton Chivela to Angop.
The official stressed that the institution he runs has been in contact with student associations and guardians to learn about the constraints experienced and inform that efforts are being made to pay debts.
"We hope that the situation will be resolved as soon as possible. So we call on the entire student community to continue working with INAGBE, so that together we can solve the problems", he stressed.
Cuba is home to 50 percent of Angolan scholarship students, with the rest spread across 22 other countries.