Arab Times

Colleges offer war-torn a route to US

150 Syrian students get scholarshi­ps

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BOSTON, May 24, (AP): Colleges in the US are opening their doors — and their financial aid — to Syrian refugees.

Over the past year, at least a dozen schools have promised to cover full or partial tuition for Syrian refugees who are accepted for enrollment. They join a coalition of more than 60 colleges that have started providing scholarshi­ps to Syrian students since the country’s civil war began in 2011.

So far, colleges have awarded scholarshi­ps to more than 150 Syrian students. It’s an effort organized by the Institute of Internatio­nal Education, a nonprofit group that offers financial help to students who are displaced by violence and natural disasters.

Among more than 11 million Syrians who have fled their homes, the institute estimates that at least 100,000 are qualified to attend college but have few options to do so.

“We’ve never really had those numbers before,” said Allan Goodman, president of the institute. “The Syrian civil war is more complicate­d and at a much larger scale than any other crisis.”

To help refugees resume their studies, an initial wave of schools volunteere­d to offer financial aid soon after war broke out. Since then, many have followed amid pressure from their students.

The University of Southern California

terviewed Blair and he told them he had refused to participat­e in the bombing, according to court documents detailing the plea.

“He wanted me to go with him. I told him no. I didn’t want to join the Jihad,” he told agents, according to the documents. is offering to pay full tuition for as many as six refugees starting next year. Elizabetht­own College in Pennsylvan­ia pledged to cover $25,000 a year for five more.

Agreed

Graduate students at USC had pushed the university to offer scholarshi­ps for several months before the administra­tion agreed. Tufts University near Boston joined the coalition in late 2013 after a student government called for it. At Davidson College in North Carolina, officials said they learned about the effort only after students brought it to their attention. The private school pledged financial aid to Syrian students last month.

“This is largely driven by our students,” said Kaye-Lani Laughna, the internatio­nal admission officer at Davidson. “I’m hopeful that we’ll be able to welcome a Syrian student in the next year.”

The coalition includes colleges in some states whose governors tried to block Syrian refugees last year, including in North Carolina, New Jersey and Ohio. Experts said they hadn’t heard of any universiti­es taking a similar stand against refugees.

Mohamad Bassel Khair, 28, fled Damascus after explosions and firefights became routine. After going to Egypt, where he and his wife couldn’t legally work, Khair heard about scholarshi­ps

Blair said he didn’t tell the authoritie­s about the plot because he believed that he was already under law enforcemen­t surveillan­ce.

“I thought I was being followed so I figured you guys would know something of it,” Blair told the agents. (AP) at New Jersey’s Montclair State University and decided to apply.

“They gave me a full scholarshi­p, including rooming,” Khair said. “They were so helpful for me.”

He is graduating with a master’s in nutrition and food science and is now seeking asylum in the US for his family, including a 2-year-old son.

At least one college, though, questions whether it’s legal to earmark financial aid for Syrian students. The University of Colorado Boulder rejected a petition asking to create scholarshi­ps for Syrian students, saying it would violate a federal law banning discrimina­tion based on national origin. The school says it already offers other financial aid to help internatio­nal students, including Syrians.

Officials at the Institute of Internatio­nal Education countered that other schools have offered scholarshi­ps for Syrian students without facing legal action, and they expect others to follow. Daniel Obst, a deputy vice president at the institute, said that more than 230 colleges recently agreed to waive tuition for at least one Syrian student if the institute can find other sources of money for airfare and lodging.

Enrolled

The number of Syrians studying at US colleges has risen steadily in recent years but is still relatively low compared with other countries in the

Iranian man sentenced:

A CanadianIr­anian dual citizen was sentenced in the United States to three years in prison for violating sanctions against Iran, the US Justice Department said on Monday.

Ali Reza Parsa, 45, a resident of Canada, pleaded guilty in January in US District Court in New York and was region. There were 800 Syrians enrolled in 2015, compared with 9,000 from Kuwait. Demand from Syrians has been lower, experts say, in part because they had a strong education system of their own before war broke out. Now, many Syrian schools have closed or been destroyed.

Along with offering financial aid, some US colleges are also loosening their admission requiremen­ts to help bring refugees. Instead of measuring students’ English language skills through standardiz­ed tests that carry fees, some schools are offering online interviews instead. Some are accepting scanned copies of academic transcript­s if the original has been lost.

And some schools are also making room for refugees at their overseas branches. In March, Bard College announced three full scholarshi­ps for Syrian students at its Berlin campus. Meanwhile, the European Union recently announced 400 new scholarshi­ps for Syrian students, and colleges in Europe have also started offering financial aid to refugees.

But the demand still far exceeds what schools can offer. Thousands of Syrians typically apply for each new batch of scholarshi­ps, said Goodman, the institute’s president.

“We have to try,” he said. “The price to the world of having a lost generation is just incalculab­le, and it’s all bad.”

sentenced on Friday, the department said in a news release.

“Over the course of six years, Parsa repeatedly violated export control laws and aided Iranian entities in procuring high-tech electronic components that have both commercial and military uses,” Assistant Attorney General Carlin said. (RTRS)

Man convicted of murdering Iraqi:

An 18-year-old was convicted of murder Monday in the killing of an Iraqi man who was taking photos of his first snowfall in Texas.

Nykerion Nealon faces up to life in prison in the death of Ahmed AlJumaili, 36, who was outside his Dallas apartment complex taking pictures of snow with his wife and brother on the night of March 4, 2015, when he was fatally shot.

Police said at the time that Nealon told officers he had been hunting for people he thought had shot at his girlfriend’s nearby apartment complex that evening. Police said they didn’t believe Nealon knew Al-Jumaili.

Defense attorney Russell Wilson argued that his client was at the apartments when the shooting took place but someone else pulled the trigger.

But a friend of Nealon’s testified that Nealon pulled the trigger, and prosecutor­s said Nealon had searched online for how to beat a murder charge and how to survive prison shortly after the shooting, according to local media. (AP)

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