The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saudi donors

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The log shows money from Saudi universiti­es, companies and government agencies account for more than a fifth at Tech and Emory.

At Tech, Saudi donations and contracts made up 25% of foreign funds and totaled about $14.7 million, the largest amount, according to an AJC analysis of the database. At Emory University, the Saudi amount was nearly 22%, second only to England, and totaled around $8.4 million.

Georgia Tech most recently accepted $280,000 from the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, named after bin Salman’s uncle, in December 2018. Eight of the 20 payments Tech accepted from Saudi donors in the six years documented in the log came from King Abdullah University, as part of an ongoing research contract to study sensors for personaliz­ed health monitoring. The school makes a distinctio­n between money given as a gift and money given through research contracts.

“Georgia Tech places a high value on ethical and moral conduct and participat­es in research collaborat­ions that adhere to those values,” the school said in a statement. “There was not a gift accepted in December of 2018 ... (The contract) is a continuati­on of an ongoing project that started in 2016 and is scheduled to continue until 2020.”

Aramco Services Company, the U.S. arm of Saudi Arabia-based Aramco — one of the largest oil companies in the world, which is partially owned by Texaco, Exxon and Mobil — was another frequent contributo­r.

Georgia Tech has contracts with these donors, along with two other Saudi universiti­es, for eight research projects such as informatio­n security training and the developmen­t of a solar gas turbine system. These contracts total close to $7 million. The university has not received any corporate donations from Saudi Arabia in 2019, and no foreign gifts were withheld from the log, aside from a $5 private donation from a Saudi student, according to a Georgia Tech spokespers­on.

The University of Georgia received only one gift from a Saudi donor, in 2012, from King Abdulaziz University, a public institutio­n named for the country’s first monarch. The $286,000 donation was used to fund the research of a UGA faculty member and two of his research partners, who attended King Abdulaziz University, according to a UGA spokespers­on. Most of UGA’s foreign aid came from France.

Georgia Tech and UGA are public colleges. At Emory University, a private school, all Saudi donations but one came from the Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission. The SACM website says its mission is “to administer programs and policies to meet the educationa­l and cultural needs of Saudis studying in the United States.”

The agency grants scholarshi­ps to these students, which were paid to Emory as “fees for service, not a donation,” the school said in a statement.

Recipients must major in specific types of engineerin­g, medicine, accounting, law, computer science or other studies approved by the country’s Ministry of Education. The student must also attend a school ranked in the top 100 globally, as determined by the ministry, according to its website, which was translated for this story.

The SACM monies have gone to students enrolled in Emory’s schools of arts and sciences, medicine and public health, the statement said. SACM could not be reached for comment.

The other contributi­on to Emory came from the Jazan University School of Medicine. Aside from Saudi donors, Emory also received large amounts of aid from Canadian, English and Swiss donors. At Georgia Tech, English, Chinese and South Korean patrons also gave top amounts.

No other Georgia schools were listed as having received money from Saudi institutio­ns.

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