Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

St Andrews university apologises to students

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SCOTLAND’S top university has apologised for failing its black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) scholars.

St Andrews University principal Professor Sally Mapstone said students and staff had been let down, saying “on behalf of this university, I apologise for that”. The students’ associatio­n has also apologised, saying it had “fallen short” of doing everything it could for BAME students.

Professor Mapstone’s comments come amid a worldwide focus on racial equality, prompted by the death of black man George Floyd who was killed by a policeman in Minneapoli­s.

They follow a student takeover of the university’s Instagram account, with posts claiming the institutio­n needed to do more to improve diversity and acknowledg­e its “dreadful history of white privilege”.

Professor Mapstone outlined a number of actions the university was taking to improve BAME representa­tion.

“We know that for decades St Andrews hasn’t got this right, that we’ve let down our BAME students and staff and that our university has been, and continues to be, so much the poorer for it,” she said.

“Acknowledg­ing that injustice, understand­ing what we are and have been doing to right it and where we must all play a part in enabling structural change is an absolutely fundamenta­l step in our reform.”

A year-long project has found more than 20% of St Andrews students are BAME, compared to 8.8% across Scotland as a whole.

In addition, 6.6% of staff identify as BAME, along with 35.4% of postgradua­tes. Just 4% of Scotland’s population identifies as BAME, and in Fife the figure is 2.4%.

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