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Rosobrnadzor denied data about a stroke in a schoolgirl on the Unified State Exam in Samara

Muzaev: information about a schoolgirl's stroke on the Unified State Exam in Samara is fake
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Photo: IZVESTIA/Sergey Lantyukhov
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The information that a schoolgirl in Samara had a stroke while taking the Unified State Exam (USE) is not true, as the girl had an allergic reaction. This was announced on June 3 by the head of Rosobrnadzor, Anzor Muzaev.

Earlier, information spread in the media that after completing the Unified State Exam in history in Samara, one of the students was allegedly hospitalized with a suspected stroke. These data were later officially denied by the regional government.

The head of the department stressed that medical assistance was required due to allergies, and the incident occurred after the exam was completed. According to him, the initial reports of a serious diagnosis were aimed at creating a resonance and misled the public. Muzaev noted that in pursuit of popularity, the authors of such news cause concern among hundreds of thousands of people.

"There was no stroke. Initially, it did not exist. But I needed news. Do you understand? We need some kind of news that someone has been humiliated, insulted, deprived of their rights, and so on, just so someone supposedly reads it," he told TASS on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF).

On the same day, it became known that in Kabardino-Balkaria, a student managed to defend in court the result of the Unified State Exam in physics, which had previously been canceled due to suspicions of using a cheat sheet. It was clarified that the exam itself was passed without comments from the observers, and the student did not leave the classroom.

Переведено сервисом «Яндекс Переводчик»

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