logo
Foreign students wary as Trump presses dehumanizing campaign

Foreign students wary as Trump presses dehumanizing campaign

Kuwait Times02-06-2025
US administration expands crackdown on elite universities
CAMBRIDGE: Donald Trump's expanding crackdown on elite universities is prompting some international students to abandon applications to campuses in the United States and spreading stress and anxiety among those already enrolled. The president has upended the country's reputation among foreign students, who number around one million, as he presses a campaign against US universities he sees as obstructing his 'Make America Great Again' populist agenda. He has blocked Harvard hosting international scholars in a maneuver being challenged legally, targeted non-citizen campus activists for deportation, and most recently suspended student visa processing across the board.
Harvard applied mathematics and economic student Abdullah Shahid Sial, 20, said the Trump administration's campaign against US universities that the president accused of being hotbeds of liberal bias and anti-Semitism had been 'dehumanizing.' 'It's really unfortunate that this is the case for 18, 19, and 20-year-olds who came here without any family, and in most cases, haven't been to the US before,' said Sial, who is from Pakistan and hopes to be able to return to Harvard next academic year.
Sial said he advised acquaintances to have backup plans if US colleges became inaccessible, and that a friend applied to Harvard's law school, as well as Columbia's, and two less reputable British institutions - ultimately opting to go to the UK. 'He definitely liked Harvard way more (but) he doesn't want this amount of uncertainty surrounding his education,' Sial said. Karl Molden, a Harvard government and classics student from Austria, said Trump's move to block the university hosting and enrolling foreign students meant he was unsure if he would be able to return after summer vacation.
'Target group'
While that decision - affecting some 27 percent of the overall Harvard population - was paused by a judge pending a hearing Thursday, the move still threw student plans into chaos. 'I kind of figured I would be in the target group of Trump. I'm personally right in the middle of it, so an option for me would be to study abroad... I have applied to study at Oxford because of all the action' taken by Trump, said Molden, 21.
'It's just really hard.' Harvard academics say they have already started to feel the impact of Trump's vendetta against the school, in feedback from colleagues based outside the United States. 'I've already heard this from professors in other countries who say 'we encourage our best students to go to the United States',' Harvard professor Ryan Enos told AFP at a noisy rally against Trump's policies Tuesday, adding 'we wonder if we can tell them that anymore.'
The halt to visa processing revealed this week is reportedly to allow for more stringent screening of applicants' social media - and protest activity. 'International students already represent the most tracked and vetted category of non-immigrants in the United States. It is a poor use of taxpayer dollars,' said the NAFSA Association of International Educators non-profit. Trump meanwhile continued his assault on Harvard, saying university leaders have 'got to behave themselves.
'Harvard is treating our country with great disrespect, and all they're doing is getting in deeper and deeper,' he said Wednesday in the White House. One Spanish student of politics and statistics, who declined to be named for fear of retaliation, told AFP she would not be deterred from pursuing her planned year abroad at Columbia University. 'It's scary, because we think to ourselves that all our activity on social networks could be monitored, for example if we like pro-Palestinian posts or anti-Trump posts. All of that could see us denied a visa,' she said. Students due to return to Harvard after the summer break are in limbo pending a ruling on Harvard's exclusion from the foreign student system.
'I'm completely in the dark,' said 20-year-old Alfred Williamson, a Welsh-Danish physics and government student in his second year at Harvard. 'As for my other options, and like all other international students, I'm just clinging on to the hope that Harvard will win this battle against the White House.' Sial, the Harvard student from Pakistan, said foreign students like him were 'made to fight this battle which no one signed up for.' 'It's really unfortunate that it's come down to that.'— AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump regrets withdrawal of US delegation from Gaza peace talks
Trump regrets withdrawal of US delegation from Gaza peace talks

Kuwait News Agency

time5 hours ago

  • Kuwait News Agency

Trump regrets withdrawal of US delegation from Gaza peace talks

WASHINGTON, July 25 (KUNA) -- US President Donald J. Trump said the withdrawal of US mediators from the talks on truce in Gaza Strip was regrettable. Speaking to reporters at the White House on Friday, he blamed the Palestinian movement Hamas for what he called lack of desire to reach a ceasefire-hostage release deal with Israel. He recalled his earlier statement that the talks on release of the last 10 or 20 hostages would be the toughest. President Trump made the comments one day after US Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff stated that the Trump administration decided to bring home its team from the ceasefire talks in Doha, Qatar, for consultation. (end)

UK PM under pressure to immediately recognise Palestinian statehood
UK PM under pressure to immediately recognise Palestinian statehood

Kuwait News Agency

time11 hours ago

  • Kuwait News Agency

UK PM under pressure to immediately recognise Palestinian statehood

LONDON, July 25 (KUNA) -- British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing pressure to immediately recognise Palestinian statehood after France made a commitment to do so within months and a group of about 125 MPs called on the prime minister to do the same. Labour and Lib Dem MPs on the foreign affairs committee argued that statehood is an "inalienable right" that should "not be made conditional". But their two Tory colleagues said it should only happen as part of a long-term political solution to the conflict in the Middle East, echoing the Labour government's position. Sir Keir is due to hold an emergency call with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz later today, amid warnings of mass starvation in Gaza. In a statement on Thursday evening, condemning "unspeakable and indefensible" conditions in Gaza, Sir Keir said statehood was an "inalienable right". He reiterated his call for a ceasefire in the conflict, adding this would "put us on a path" towards recognising a Palestinian state. He has previously said the UK should reserve recognition for when it would have the "greatest impact" - without specifying when this would be. Most countries - about 139 in all - formally recognise a Palestinian state, although many European nations and the United States say they will only do so as part of moves towards a long-term resolution to the conflict. Spain, Ireland and Norway formally took the step last year, hoping to exert diplomatic pressure to secure a ceasefire in Gaza. (end)

US appeals court blocks Trump's order curtailing birthright citizenship
US appeals court blocks Trump's order curtailing birthright citizenship

Kuwait Times

time20 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

US appeals court blocks Trump's order curtailing birthright citizenship

Ruling is first by a federal appeals court on merits WASHINGTON: A federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday that US President Donald Trump's executive order curtailing automatic birthright citizenship is unconstitutional and blocked its enforcement nationwide. The 2-1 decision by the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals marked the first time an appeals court has assessed the legality of Trump's order since the US Supreme Court in June curbed the power of lower court judges to enjoin that and other federal policies on a nationwide basis. The Supreme Court's June 27 ruling in litigation over Trump's birthright citizenship order limited the ability of judges to issue so-called universal injunctions and directed lower courts that had blocked the Republican president's policy nationally to reconsider the scope of their orders. But the ruling contained exceptions allowing courts to potentially still block it nationally again. That has already allowed a judge in New Hampshire to once again halt Trump's order from taking effect by issuing an injunction in a nationwide class action of children who would be denied citizenship under the policy. The 9th Circuit's majority in Wednesday's ruling said the Democratic-led states that had sued to block the policy - Washington, Arizona, Illinois and Oregon - likewise still were entitled to a nationwide injunction as a narrower order would not provide them 'complete relief.' 'The court agrees that the president cannot redefine what it means to be American with the stroke of a pen,' Washington Attorney General Nick Brown said in a statement. The Trump administration could either ask a wider panel of 9th Circuit judges to hear the case or appeal directly to the Supreme Court, which is expected to have the final word in the litigation. 'We look forward to being vindicated on appeal,' said White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson. In a statement, she said the 9th Circuit misinterpreted the US Constitution's 14th Amendment in reaching its decision. Day one order Trump signed the order on January 20, his first day back in office, as part of his hardline approach toward immigration. Trump's order directed federal agencies to refuse to recognize the citizenship of US-born children who do not have at least one parent who is an American citizen or lawful permanent resident, also known as a 'green card' holder. It was swiftly challenged in court by Democratic attorneys general from 22 states and immigrant rights advocates who argued it violates the citizenship clause of the US Constitution's 14th Amendment, long been understood to recognize that virtually anyone born in the United States is a citizen. The Constitution's 14th Amendment citizenship clause states that all 'persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.' The first judge to block Trump's directive was Seattle-based US District Judge John Coughenour, an appointee of Republican President Ronald Reagan, who called it 'blatantly unconstitutional.' The 9th Circuit's ruling upheld his decision. US Circuit Judge Ronald Gould, writing for Wednesday's majority, said Coughenour rightly concluded that Trump's executive order violated the citizenship clause of the US Constitution's 14th Amendment by denying citizenship to many persons born in the United States. Gould said a geographically limited injunction would harm the four states by forcing them to overhaul their government benefits programs to account for how people denied citizenship under Trump's order might move into them. 'It is impossible to avoid this harm absent a uniform application of the citizenship clause throughout the United States,' Gould wrote. His opinion was joined by US Circuit Judge Michael Hawkins, a fellow appointee of Democratic President Bill Clinton. US Circuit Judge Patrick Bumatay, a Trump appointee, dissented, saying in his view the Democratic-led states lacked standing to challenge Trump's order, as he warned of the risks of 'judicial overreach.' — Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store