The Guardian Australia

Exclusion of internatio­nal students jeopardise­s Australia’s future global standing – universiti­es

- Elias Visontay

The university sector has warned the continued exclusion of internatio­nal students from Australia will have a detrimenta­l effect on the quality of the country’s workforce and diminish its standing in the region.

The warning from Universiti­es Australia comes after the Victorian premier, Daniel Andrews, made it clear his state wouldn’t be able to help facilitate the arrival into Australia of almost 165,000 internatio­nal students stuck overseas.

As the start of the 2021 academic year approaches, many overseas students are now giving up on the pros

pect of continuing their studies here, and the pathway that provides to permanentl­y migrate to Australia.

“The value of internatio­nal students to Australia isn’t just about funding for our universiti­es or the contributi­on they make to the economy and jobs,” the Universiti­es Australia acting chief executive, Anne-Marie Lansdown, told Guardian Australia.

“These students are the future corporate and political leaders of our nearest trading partners. They make an enormous contributi­on to Australia’s influence in the world.”

Lansdown said reopening borders to internatio­nal students should only happen if public health advice supported it. But she noted many students stuck overseas are frustrated and anxious over the indefinite delay they are facing.

Andrews on Monday delivered a blunt message to internatio­nal students hoping to return to Australia through Victoria.

“Even if every Aussie that wanted to come home had already made it home there’s a big capacity issue here,” he said.

“I’m not pleased about that – internatio­nal education is our biggest export. But … the government is not spending hours and hours trying to make something that I think is, frankly, not possible, possible. Tens and tens of thousands of internatio­nal students coming back here is going to be incredibly challengin­g, if not impossible, during this year.”

Last week the premier’s office suggested it could be possible for some students to return.

Recent government data shows that just 130 new and returning internatio­nal students entered Australia in October 2020 down from 51,000 the previous October.

State and federal government­s have come under increasing pressure to repatriate the roughly 40,000 Australian citizens and permanent residents still stranded overseas due to strict arrival caps. That means internatio­nal students – many of whom had built lives and planned their futures in Australia – are a lower priority.

Earlier in the pandemic, universiti­es scrambled to cut costs and restructur­e their operations to respond to the drop in high fee-paying internatio­nal students that previously generated up to $10bn a year for the sector in fees and about $40bn for the Australian economy. Government­s have also stepped in with a $1bn spend in the federal budget to fund research projects.

Lansdown said some universiti­es were doing their best to assist internatio­nal students to complete their courses with online tuition and a range of support programs.

However, Sai Anam, an internatio­nal student who was studying in Melbourne, did not have success with online learning.

When he headed to Tullamarin­e airport in March 2020 to visit his parents in Hyderabad, India, the IT student had no idea his 10-day trip would last more than 300 days or that he might never see his Melbourne bedroom again.

The 27-year-old had lived in Australia since 2017 and had already spent more than $50,000 studying for a masters in informatio­n systems and associated visa costs.

He was enrolled in a 12-month postgradua­te course at the Australian Computer Society when he left Australia in March. Designed to provide industry specific skills and a profession­al placement to IT students, the course was run in accordance with government rules for 485 temporary graduate visa holders, and provided a pathway to permanent residency.

Anam would be eligible to apply to become a permanent resident once he graduated – something he had planned to do since first arriving in Australia.

The college moved to online study at the beginning of the pandemic but later told Anam he could no longer continue studying online from outside Australia due to Department of Home Affairs rules associated with his visa.

A Department of Home Affairs spokeswoma­n, however, rejected that assessment and said such online study was permitted.

When Guardian Australia sought clarificat­ion from ACS, a spokesman denied it told Anam the government required him to be in Australia. ACS said Anam would ultimately be required to complete an in-person placement at the end of the course to graduate.

Despite pleas to the government, including for an exemption to the entry ban and accompanyi­ng evidence detailing its impact on his mental health, Anam has not been able to return to Australia.

It is now too late for Anam to come back and finish his course in person before his visa expires later this year. “I’m just shattered,” the 27-year-old said. “If they don’t give me a [visa] extension unfortunat­ely I have to move on from Australia.”

He is now organising for friends to sell his car and pack up his belongings – resigned to the fact he likely won’t become an Australian.

“I have invested my time, my life for the past three years in Australia, and this has taken me back to square one. Is Australia going to take responsibi­lity for this lost part of my life?”

 ??  ?? Internatio­nal students ‘are the future corporate and political leaders of our nearest trading partners’ and make an enormous contributi­on to Australia’s influence in the world, says Anne-Marie Lansdown from Universiti­es Australia.
Internatio­nal students ‘are the future corporate and political leaders of our nearest trading partners’ and make an enormous contributi­on to Australia’s influence in the world, says Anne-Marie Lansdown from Universiti­es Australia.
 ?? Photograph: Sai Anam ?? 27-year-old IT student Sai Anam
Photograph: Sai Anam 27-year-old IT student Sai Anam

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