Antonio Ramon Horta AG-7 was a medical school in Cuba that contained 315 Pakistani students. The campus which had more than twenty professors is located in Agramonte, which is a small town and a hamlet of Jagüey Grande, in Matanzas Province. The campus was founded in 2006 and was dismantled in 2010.[citation needed]

Overview

In the region, a total of 64 educational institutions were established at the secondary and pre-university levels. These institutions included Basic Secondary Schools in the Field (ESBEC), Pre-university Institutes in the Field (IPUEC), Polytechnic Institutes, and Schools of Crafts, which focused on technical education. Additional centres were created to train teachers. The first school to be opened in the area was the ESBEC - First National Congress on Education and Culture, inaugurated on April 25, 1971.[citation needed]

Together, these schools served over 30,000 students from the provinces of Matanzas and the eastern region of Cuba. Each school was identified by its name, the location (AG for Agramonte, J for Jaguey Grande, and T for Torriente), and a lot number, a system used to organize the citrus cultivation fields in the area.[citation needed]

Due to poor facilities in AG7, the students forced government to be shifted to medical university near to a hospital. The school has been evacuated and the students shifted to Sancti Spiritus and a provincial hospital with better facilities.[citation needed]

Name

Antonio Ramon Horta was one of several people from the National Revolutionary Police Force who died in combat.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Vázquez, Pedro Etcheverry; Oceguera, Santiago Gutiérrez (2022-12-07). Bandidismo: Derrota de la CIA en Cuba (in Spanish). RUTH. ISBN 978-959-211-592-7.

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