Daily Tribune (Philippines)

WASHINGTON ADJUSTS VISA RESTRICTIO­NS

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t issued a new statement

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BEIJING, China — (China Daily) Opposition to the introducti­on of visa restrictio­ns on internatio­nal students in the United States continues to grow, with 180 academic institutio­ns in the country speaking out against the move, despite adjustment­s made to the policy by the US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE).

On 6 July, ICE announced that students currently in the US on F1 and M1 visas “must depart the country or take other measures, such as transferri­ng to a school with in-person instructio­n to remain in lawful status,” if their school’s classes are entirely online in the fall semester.

Anyone found violating the rules, ICE said, would risk “immigratio­n consequenc­es, including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceeding­s.”

The policy was slammed by hundreds of thousands of internatio­nal students in the US, and prompted higher education institutio­ns in the country to launch lawsuits against ICE.

Amid escalating pressure, ICE issued a new statement on its website. When answering the question: “Are students attending schools that are entirely online barred from attending that school?,” it said: “Students will not be permitted to enter or remain in the US to attend such schools, but they are not barred from continuing to attend all classes at these schools from abroad.”

Under the updated rules, internatio­nal students must take at least some of their classes in person. Overseas students can still keep their visas, as long as they can prove that their schools will offer some offline courses in the upcoming fall semester.

ICE noted that this approach “balances students’ ability to continue their studies while minimizing the risk of spread of COVID-19 in our communitie­s by ensuring that individual­s who do not need to be present in the United States are not physically here.”

The adjustment comes amid anger among US universiti­es, as the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigratio­n, which represents 180 higher education institutio­ns in the US, issued a 22-page document on Saturday to show nationwide support for rescinding the restrictio­ns.

“ICE’s new policy serves only to severely disrupt internatio­nal students’ educationa­l attainment, and our country is worse off for it,” said Miriam Feldblum, executive director of the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigratio­n, in a statement.

“This quasi-internatio­nal student ban represents another unfortunat­e assault by the administra­tion against immigrants and higher education,” she added.

US President Donald Trump has insisted that schools and colleges return to in-person instructio­n as soon as possible. Soon after the restrictio­ns were announced, Trump repeated on Twitter that schools must reopen this fall, adding that the Democrats wanted to keep schools closed “for political reasons, not for health reasons.”

This quasi-internatio­nal student ban represents another unfortunat­e assault by the administra­tion against immigrants and higher education.

But the restrictio­ns have put additional pressure on universiti­es to reopen even amid growing concerns about the recent spread of COVID-19 among young adults.

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