“UBC, of course, can rent their space to anybody. However, from my perspective, I think that you should be looking at some ethical standards that should apply,” she said.
“In the very minimum, one would think that any organization, any institution that’s going to rent out a space to a government that is a regular, persistent, violent human rights violators, that they would apply some standards to it.”
Kwan suggested the university should have warned those taking the exam about the concerns regarding the NSL.
Kwan called UBC’s response “completely inadequate.”
“It’s just basically saying, well, it doesn’t matter. We’re blind to all of these issues,” she said.
“As a global institution, which is what UBC is, you would think that they would have a little bit more thought than to say, ‘We will just follow the regulations of basic rental requirements.’ That’s not good enough.”