The United States announced on Friday it will not take in any new foreign students seeking online-only study
The United States announced on Friday it will not
take in any new foreign students seeking online-only study, after rescinding a
hotly contested order to expel those already here and preparing for that
because of the pandemic.
The policy change was
announced in a statement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
US President Donald
Trump has made a tough line on immigration a cornerstone of his message and has
suspended several kinds of visas for foreigners during the coronavirus crisis.
The original policy
change of revoking the visas of foreign students whose classes will
move online in the autumn was taken to court by top universities including
Harvard and MIT, teachers unions and at least 18 states.
And on July 14 the administration reversed
course and rescinded the decision.
That measure had been
seen as a move by Trump to put pressure on educational institutions that are
adopting a cautious approach to reopening amid the global Covid-19 pandemic.
Trump is eager for
schools at all levels to reopen with in-person classes as a sign of a return to
normality as he fights an uphill battle for re-election in November.
He is pushing for this
even though the virus is out of control in some states, with the US death toll
a world-high of more than 144,000.
His administration is
leaving it largely up to states themselves to figure out how to open schools
safely.
There were more than
one million international students in the US for the 2018-19 academic year,
according to the Institute of International Education.
Many schools depend
heavily on the tuition paid by those students.
Most US colleges and
universities have not yet announced their plans for the fall semester but
Harvard has said all its classes for the 2020-21 academic year will be
conducted online, "with rare exceptions".
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