Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Govt aims to attract 2 lakh foreign students

- Prashant K Nanda prashant.n@htlive.com ▪

NEW DELHI: The government on Wednesday announced an ambitious plan to attract 200,000 foreign students to India, more than four times the current number.

The target is part of a “Study in India” scheme launched jointly by four ministries—human resource developmen­t, external affairs, home and commerce. From easing the visa process to giving a sizable fee waiver to for- eign students from Asia and Africa, the scheme marks a concerted effort to make Indian campuses diverse, in terms of the number of internatio­nal students.

Union human resource developmen­t minister (HRD) Prakash Javadekar said Indian higher education sector often complains about restrictiv­e rules but now the government is making a conscious effort to liberalize it. “India can become a hub of affordable education for foreign students,” he said, adding that they are opening up top universiti­es to foreign students. “Study in India will open the gates of prominent educationa­l institutio­ns of India for foreign students,” Javadekar said. As part of the move, India will target students from countries in South, South-East and West Asia, Africa and Commonweal­th of Independen­t States that were part of the former Soviet Union.

“Initially, we are targeting 30 partner countries,” said R. Subrahmany­am, higher education secretary, adding that his ministry has shortliste­d 160 colleges and universiti­es to execute the plan initially. Authoritie­s said that in order to make the plan attractive, institutio­ns and government will offer fee waiver—partial or full —to over 53% of these foreign students. All admission will happen via a single window system: applicants from these 30 countries will apply on an online platform for selection to 160 institutio­ns. External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj said though her ministry attracts foreign students through two dedicated institutio­ns—Nalanda University and the South Asian University—the new move has limitless possibilit­ies in terms of attracting foreign students and tying up with other countries. “Study in India is an invitation to foreign students,” she said. “The move will bring multicultu­ralism and diversity to Indian universiti­es,” said Satyapal Singh, minister of state for HRD.

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