logo
101 Indian students get Erasmus+ scholarships for higher education in Europe

101 Indian students get Erasmus+ scholarships for higher education in Europe

Time of India08-07-2025
A total of 101 Indian students, including 50 women, have received the Erasmus+ scholarship for master's programs in Europe starting in 2025. India remains a top recipient of the scholarship, which supports academic mobility and covers tuition, travel, and living costs. The program reflects EU-India priorities, with students studying in 19 EU countries.
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Also Read: 358 international students regain SEVIS status in a significant settlement with DHS
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
A total of 101 India n students, including 50 women, have been awarded the Erasmus+ scholarship for a two-year master's programme in Europe starting in 2025, according to the Delegation of the European Union (EU) to India. With this, India remains the largest recipient of the Erasmus+ scholarship since 2014 and ranks among the top three this year.The Erasmus+ programme, launched in 1987, is the EU's flagship initiative supporting international academic mobility. The scholarship allows students to study at two or more European universities and earn joint, double, or multiple degrees. It covers tuition fees, travel costs, and living expenses.This year's Indian cohort reflects shared priorities between the EU and India, including focus areas such as sustainability, artificial intelligence, public policy, intellectual property law, engineering, food security, and safe nuclear applications. The selected students represent 20 states from across India.To mark the achievement, the EU Delegation hosted a pre-departure ceremony in New Delhi, where scholars interacted with alumni, representatives from EU member states, and academic partners.Congratulating the awardees, EU Ambassador to India, Herve Delphin, said, 'Erasmus+ is more than a scholarship, it's a passport for personal and professional growth and a window of opportunities in and with Europe.'He added that over 90,000 Indian students are currently studying in Europe. 'These students are choosing Europe for its quality, diversity, and affordability,' Delphin said.The 2025 batch of Indian students will study across 19 EU countries. This includes France (24 scholars), Spain (12), Belgium (8), Portugal (8), Germany (7), Italy (5), Poland (4), Czech Republic (4), Austria (3), Hungary (3), Estonia (3), Netherlands (2), Croatia (2), Greece (2), and one each in Denmark, Finland, Norway, Ireland, and Latvia. Some students will also attend affiliated universities in other European and non-European countries.The Erasmus+ programme has supported over 2,200 Indian students through the Erasmus Mundus Scholarship since 2004. Including both short- and long-term awards, over 6,000 scholarships have been granted to Indian students under the Erasmus+ scheme.Officials noted a steady rise in women's participation from India, with near-equal representation becoming a consistent feature in recent years.Europe hosts more than 4,000 higher education institutions and has over 17.5 million tertiary students, 1.35 million educators, and 1.17 million researchers.The current phase of Erasmus+ (2021–2027) is the most ambitious yet, with a total budget of €26.2 billion (₹2.09 lakh crore). It supports global opportunities in education, research, youth, and sport for students, educators, and institutions.(With inputs from PTI)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CoinDCX hit by $44.2 mn security breach; founders say customer funds unaffected, safe
CoinDCX hit by $44.2 mn security breach; founders say customer funds unaffected, safe

The Hindu

time10 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

CoinDCX hit by $44.2 mn security breach; founders say customer funds unaffected, safe

Indian cryptocurrency exchange CoinDCX has suffered a security breach, resulting in theft of $44.2 million, or ₹378 crore, even as the founders took to X to reassure that customer funds remained unaffected and safe, with the compromise limited to an internal operational account. The total exposure is being absorbed entirely by CoinDCX, using the company's treasury reserves, the company said in a First Incident Report released on Sunday. According to the report, on July 19, at 4 a.m., CoinDCX security systems detected an incident involving unauthorised access to one of its accounts on the partner exchange, leading to a financial exposure of about $44 million. The incident once again puts the spotlight on mounting security threats in the highly volatile world of cryptocurrencies. Last year, crypto exchange WazirX faced a hack in India, leading to the loss of more than $230 million, and marking one of the biggest such heists in India. The theft had prompted a thorough examination of safety measures and eroded sentiments. CoinDCX co-founders Sumit Gupta and Neeraj Khandelwal took to the social media platform X to address the situation, confirming that the attack was the result of a sophisticated server breach, targeting an internal wallet, not the ones holding customer assets. The incident was first flagged by blockchain investigator ZachXBT, following which the exchange made the disclosure public. "Today, one of our internal operational accounts -- used only for liquidity provisioning on a partner exchange -- was compromised due to a sophisticated server breach. I confirm that the CoinDCX wallets used to store customer assets are not impacted and are completely safe. This won't cause any loss to our customers. CoinDCX will be bearing the full amount," Mr. Gupta said. "The total amount lost was USD 44Mn out of our treasury assets. Coindcx Treasury will be bearing these losses," Mr. Khandelwal wrote. Following this, users rushed to check their balances, leading to a spike in withdrawal requests. The sudden surge in activity led to CoinDCX's portfolio APIs, which display user balances and transaction histories, becoming jammed and unresponsive. For several hours, many were unable to even see their holdings on the app, adding fuel to rumours and anxiety online. The co-founders later updated that Portfolio APIs have been restored. Affected infrastructure has been completely isolated, and CoinDCX operations continue to run normally, the company said. CERT-In, or the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team, has been informed about the incident. Detailed forensics with two globally reputed security agencies is being carried out, and reports will be shared for public benefit, it added. "CoinDCX services remain fully operational. Trading activity, INR deposits and INR withdrawals continue. INR withdrawals below Rs 5 lakhs will reflect in your account within 5 hours, while withdrawals above Rs 5 lakhs will be processed within 72 hours. The incident was isolated and has no impact on your portfolio access or operations," the company stated. Social media is flooded with mixed reactions. While some praised CoinDCX for absorbing the losses and protecting user funds, others criticised the delay in public disclosure and raised concerns over the broader security of crypto platforms in India. "Coindcx silent for 17 hours? That's more suspense than a thriller! In crypto, transparency isn't optional; it's key. Stay open to keep trust alive!" a user wrote. "Good to see CoinDCX acting responsibly, assuring user funds are safe, and not passing losses onto customers. Sets a positive precedent for Indian crypto exchanges," another said.

Russian rouble weakens against US dollar after fresh EU sanctions
Russian rouble weakens against US dollar after fresh EU sanctions

Deccan Herald

time24 minutes ago

  • Deccan Herald

Russian rouble weakens against US dollar after fresh EU sanctions

The Russian rouble weakened against the U.S. dollar and China's yuan on Friday after the European Union agreed on its 18th package of sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine, which included measures against the Russian energy industry. As of 1245 GMT, the rouble was 0.8% lower at 78.70 per U.S. dollar, according to data compiled by LSEG, based on over-the-counter quotes. The rouble is up about 45% against the dollar since the start of the year. The rouble, insulated from global financial flows by Russian currency controls and Western sanctions, remained strong despite a change in the attitude of U.S. President Donald Trump toward Russia in recent weeks. Analysts said the new EU sanctions will have little impact. The rouble is receiving support from more foreign currency sales by the central bank. "Sanctions will increase pressure on the Russian economy, but their effect may be limited. Russia will continue to reorient its exports towards Asia," Russian Agricultural Bank analysts said in a research note. The EU will set a moving price cap on Russian crude at 15% below its average market price, but Russia has so far managed to sell most of its oil above the previous price cap as the current mechanism makes it unclear who must police its implementation. The last time the rouble took a hit from Western sanctions was when the U.S. imposed sanctions on Gazprombank, which handled Russia's energy trade, in November 2024. The rouble rallied against all major currencies early this year, in large part due to hopes for a U.S.-mediated peace deal with Ukraine, which have since evaporated.

France faces another tough wheat export year despite better crop
France faces another tough wheat export year despite better crop

Deccan Herald

time38 minutes ago

  • Deccan Herald

France faces another tough wheat export year despite better crop

France could struggle to sell a much bigger wheat crop expected this year as export options for the European Union's top wheat producer have narrowed due to less demand from Algeria and China as well as strong competition from cheaper Black Sea grain. Sparse overseas demand could lead France to stock hefty amounts of wheat or offload more crop in livestock feed markets. Either outcome could keep prices below production costs, a trend that has fuelled farmer protests in the past year. Farm office FranceAgriMer on Wednesday projected French soft wheat exports outside the EU in 2025/26 at a relatively modest 7.5 million metric tons, contributing to a forecast 21-year high for end-of-season stocks. Sales to Algeria and China, among France's biggest wheat buyers in recent years, stalled last season due to a diplomatic fallout between Paris and Algiers and a general drop in Chinese imports amid hefty domestic supply. A smaller than normal 2024 French crop meant steady demand from Morocco and West Africa, plus sporadic sales to Egypt and Thailand, absorbed last season's surplus. But that may no longer be enough. "The harsh reality is that France has a huge challenge to reach a 7.5 million ton export programme," Rory Deverell, owner of Black Silo Commodity Consulting, said. A price rise in Russia amid tight availability in the world's biggest wheat supplier may offer only brief respite, with Russian and other Black Sea region producers expected to sweep up near-term demand, as shown by this week's 1 million ton purchase by Algeria. 'Russia, Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria are likely to dominate wheat exports in coming months," a German trader said. 'The west EU faces the threat of being only a niche wheat exporter."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store