Coronavirus: Anger over US decision on foreign students’ visas

0
451
Raphael Sanchez, a chief counsel for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, has been charged with stealing immigrants' identities.

 

The decision of the US to withdraw visas from foreign students whose courses have fully moved online has been criticised by politicians and academics, according to a BBC report.

- Advertisement -

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had earlier said people could face deportation unless they changed to an institution with in-person classes as a number of  US universities  consider online teaching in the new academic year due to coronavirus.

The Student and Exchange Visitor Programme, which is operated by ICE, had introduced a temporary exemption to allow students whose courses had moved online for the spring and summer semesters to remain in the US. However, the exemption will not be extended into the new academic year.  Students who are in the US on F-1 and M-1 visas are affected.

- Advertisement -

Harvard has also announced that all course instruction would be delivered online in the new academic year, including for the limited number of students allowed to live on campus.

According to the Chronicle of Higher Education, 9% of US universities are planning to teach all their classes online in the autumn, although this could change in the coming months.

-Advertisement-


The president of Harvard University, Larry Bacow, said in a statement quoted by US media: “We are deeply concerned that the guidance issued today by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement imposes a blunt, one-size-fits-all approach to a complex problem, giving international students, particularly those in online programmes, few options beyond leaving the country or transferring schools.”

READ ALSO: COVID -19: US to deport foreign students receiving online classes

He said  that the decision “undermines the thoughtful approach taken on behalf of students by so many institutions, including Harvard, to plan for continuing academic programmes while balancing the health and safety challenges of the global pandemic”.

“Kicking international students out of the US during a global pandemic because their colleges are moving classes online for physical distancing hurts students,” said Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren. “It’s senseless, cruel, and xenophobic.”

A former US ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, also said the decision “made no sense and unworkable for most college students.”

Journalist Elizabeth Spiers, who teaches at New York University, said many of her students were reliant on visas and would be unable to follow an online programme due to the time difference between the US and their home countries and other considerations.

Noah Furlonge-Walker, 20, from Trinidad, was looking forward to starting the second year of his degree at Harvard University when he heard of the decision.

The 20-year-old moved back to Trinidad in March when the Ivy League college decided that classes would move online for the remainder of the academic year.

Mr Furlonge-Walker – who is on an F-1 visa – told the BBC: “I can’t see any sense or reasoning behind this decision.

READ ALSO: Nigerian student accuses UK varsity of maltreatment, demands refund of £20,000 tuition

“At a time like this, when everyone is trying to get back on their feet and get back to normal, why they would do something that jeopardises everyone?”

US government figures show that last year, more than 373,000 of these visas were granted.

The US had more than one million international students doing various graduate and undergraduate programmes in 2018-19, according to the Institute of International Education (IIE). That’s about 5.5% of the total student community in the country.

READ ALSO: President Buhari praises Nigerian student for returning lost wallet in Japan

Out of these, nearly three-quarters were from Asia – 48% Chinese and 26% Indians.

The IIE says that, according to the US Department of Commerce, international students contributed $45bn (£36bn) to the country’s economy.

 

 

We do everything possible to supply quality news and information to all our valuable readers day in, day out and we are committed to keep doing this. Your kind donation will help our continuous research efforts.

-Advertisement-

-Want to get the news as it breaks?-