Skip to content

US Embassy pulls funding from NZ education provider after demands for course materials and participant list

“Terminated by mutual agreement.”

Table of Contents

Summarised by Centrist

A New Zealand-based group has lost a US Embassy grant after refusing to let American officials vet its course on disinformation for alignment with US foreign policy. 

Dark Times Academy, which was set to train Pacific Island journalists, declined requests to hand over course materials and a participant list—moves that co-founder Mandy Henk said would have compromised academic independence and breached New Zealand privacy laws.

The US Embassy had originally awarded the grant under the previous administration, intending to help Pacific media combat misinformation. However, Henk says the new administration wanted to ensure the programme “aligned with US foreign policy priorities”—priorities she sarcastically summarised as “terrorising the people of Gaza, annexing Canada, invading Greenland, and bullying Panama.”

When Dark Times Academy refused to comply, discussions with the embassy led to the grant being “terminated by mutual agreement.” Despite losing US funding, the programme, called A Bit Sus, will still proceed with enrolled journalists.

Editor’s note: Like him or not, this shows how quickly some of President Trump’s policies are being enacted. Byron Clark is an advocate of several  “progressive” stances. 

Read more over at Dark Times Academy 

Image: US Embassy in New Zealand

Subscribe to our free newsletter here

Latest

Where Is the Consistency?

Where Is the Consistency?

When the architect of the Christchurch Call appears to abandon those principles when applied to a different community, it raises fundamental questions about whether those principles were ever truly universal, or merely convenient.

Members Public