The Borneo Post

Foreign university students sold ‘dreams’ in N. Cyprus

- Rania Massoud and Lisa Golden

Smugglers, often presenting themselves as agents for private universiti­es, are frequently those that promote their services to potential asylum-seekers.

UN commission­ed study

NICOSIA, Cyprus: Foreign students are big business in northern Cyprus, a tiny, breakaway statelet only recognised by Turkey, but some warn university recruiters are selling “dreams” in the internatio­nally and economical­ly isolated territory.

One Nigerian student, who requested anonymity, said he expected to arrive in the country whose football teams compete in European tournament­s. Instead, when he saw the currency was the embattled Turkish lira, he realised this was “not the Cyprus I thought it was”.

The Mediterran­ean island is divided between the internatio­nally recognised Republic of Cyprus and a northern statelet establishe­d after Turkey launched a 1974 invasion in response to a Greekspons­ored coup.

The self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) is home to just several hundred thousand people yet hosts a whopping 21 universiti­es officially recognised by the breakaway authoritie­s and by Turkey.

Internatio­nal students pay tuition in euros or US dollars, and sometimes also for accommodat­ion – a windfall for the territory’s isolated economy.

The Republic of Cyprus, an EU member, is facing record numbers of new asylum-seekers, most arriving from across the UN-patrolled buffer zone, and accuses Turkey of encouragin­g the influx.

Almost half of the north’s more than 108,000 “active” tertiary students were from outside the TRNC or Turkey in the 2021-22 academic year, official figures showed, with about 17,400 from Nigeria alone in the spring semester.

Education minister Nazim Cavusoglu estimated the university sector and its indirect revenues fuelled some 35 per cent of the north’s GDP – “far ahead of tourism”.

‘A trick’

Many foreign students can enter the TRNC without preissued visas. All must fly via Turkey due to an internatio­nal embargo.

Relatively low tuition fees – sometimes less than $3,000 per year – are a major selling point, and are often presented as if marked down by “scholarshi­ps” of up to 75 per cent.

But a university official who requested anonymity told AFP this was a “trick”.

“It is not like we are giving these scholarshi­ps” to internatio­nal students, he said, explaining that the marked-down price is the actual tuition cost.

Real internatio­nal tuition waivers were few, he added.

Universiti­es pay recruiters between several hundred and 1,000 euros ($1,040) in commission per student, sources told AFP.

While many are companies, the number of informal agents – often current or former students – has reportedly ballooned.

Some students said they had been misled about study or work opportunit­ies, or were not told they were coming to a divided island.

Cameroonia­n Rictus Franck Ngongang, 28, said he wanted “the magic” of easy entry but was duped by a recruiter.

The business student’s “first shock” was finding “there were 10 of us in a two-room flat”, after he paid 300 euros for a month’s accommodat­ion.

He was also not enrolled in the course he expected.

He has since started a support associatio­n – also involving agents – to try to help other students in difficulty.

Some recruiters “sell dreams”, he cautioned.

‘Devastatin­g’

At northern Nicosia’s small American University of Cyprus – which officials said currently has no stand-alone US university accreditat­ion – foreign students were learning Turkish in a classroom with Ottoman-style windows as the Muslim call to prayer rang out over the divided city.

But Hazan Sherifli, head of student affairs, said half the institutio­n’s 200 internatio­nal students were not attending.

Some “lose their (financial) sponsors... or some other things happen”, said public relations and marketing director Engin Sirvan, adding it was not the university’s role to police attendance.

A report by the north’s Center for Migration, Identity and Rights Studies said impoverish­ed foreign students risked falling “into the hands of criminal elements”, and that the situation “facilitate­s human traffickin­g and exploitati­on”.

The north’s Human Rights Platform said it had assisted 21 Nigerian women students this year who had been sex-trafficked and terrorised with violence and even voodoo.

The Nigerian student expressed satisfacti­on with his course but called the economic situation “devastatin­g”, with funds from his sponsor no longer able to cover his tuition.

He said he was trying to make up the difference, and feared deportatio­n as his student permit had expired, adding: “We are frightened every day.”

‘Shortcut’

The Democratic Republic of the Congo and Pakistan, along with Nigeria, were among the north’s top four source countries for foreign students in the spring semester, figures from the education ministry showed.

They were also among the south’s top four countries of origin for its some 16,700 new asylum applicants this year to September, according to official figures.

“Smugglers, often presenting themselves as agents for private universiti­es, are frequently those that promote their services to potential asylum-seekers,” a UN refugee agency-commission­ed study said.

In October, Abuja warned of “unscrupulo­us elements parading themselves as agents and deceiving unsuspecti­ng young Nigerians” about prospects in the TRNC.

Education minister Cavusoglu said legislatio­n was being drafted requiring agents to be accredited with the ministry, and to provide financial guarantees.

A representa­tion of modern Turkey’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk hanging on the wall behind his desk, he also acknowledg­ed there were up to 15,000 “passive” students not attending classes.

Nigerian Ibrahim Isaac, who runs a small agency, had a blunt message for prospectiv­e students: “If you don’t have the money... don’t come.”

Education expert Salih Sarpten said the north was “unprepared” to host so many universiti­es.

The territory is turning into a place for young people who “want to take a shortcut to Europe”, he said.

 ?? ?? Aerial photo shows a view of the old city of Cyprus’ divided capital Nicosia, showing the section under control of the internatio­nally-recognised Republic of Cyprus (foreground), the United Nations buffer zone (centre), and the selfprocla­imed “Turkish Republic of North Cyprus” recognised only by Turkey.
Aerial photo shows a view of the old city of Cyprus’ divided capital Nicosia, showing the section under control of the internatio­nally-recognised Republic of Cyprus (foreground), the United Nations buffer zone (centre), and the selfprocla­imed “Turkish Republic of North Cyprus” recognised only by Turkey.
 ?? ?? Foreign students are big business in northern Cyprus, a tiny, breakaway statelet only recognised by Turkey, but some warn university recruiters are selling “dreams” in the internatio­nally and economical­ly isolated territory.
Foreign students are big business in northern Cyprus, a tiny, breakaway statelet only recognised by Turkey, but some warn university recruiters are selling “dreams” in the internatio­nally and economical­ly isolated territory.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Combinatio­n photo shows students attending a class at the American University Of Cyprus in the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), north of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
— AFP photos Combinatio­n photo shows students attending a class at the American University Of Cyprus in the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), north of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
 ?? ?? Cavusoglu poses for a picture during an interview with AFP in the selfprocla­imed TRNC, north of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
Cavusoglu poses for a picture during an interview with AFP in the selfprocla­imed TRNC, north of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
 ?? ?? A street vendor rides his mobile shop in the Turkish-controlled side of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
A street vendor rides his mobile shop in the Turkish-controlled side of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
 ?? ?? The Ledras crossing point in the Cypriot capital Nicosia towards the selfprocla­imed Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (TRNC).
The Ledras crossing point in the Cypriot capital Nicosia towards the selfprocla­imed Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (TRNC).
 ?? ?? Men play tavleh in a cafe in the market of the the Turkish-controlled side of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.
Men play tavleh in a cafe in the market of the the Turkish-controlled side of the divided Cypriot capital Nicosia.

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