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Harvard in talks with universities to host students hit by Trump visa clampdown

Harvard in talks with universities to host students hit by Trump visa clampdown

Irish Times4 hours ago

Harvard
has been in talks with leading US and international universities to temporarily house its foreign students facing bans under US president
Donald Trump
's clampdown on the college.
Leaders from the University of Chicago and the London Business School are among those who have held discussions on accommodating students accepted for the coming academic year at Harvard, but who are now at risk of being denied visas, according to academics at the institutions.
Other US universities are examining ways to help their own current and incoming foreign students, including relocating them to campuses outside the country.
The Trump administration has
banned Harvard from accepting foreign students
as part of its broader campaign against what it claims is liberal bias and anti-Semitism on American campuses. A judge temporarily froze the order last week, delaying Mr Trump's actions.
READ MORE
The administration has suspended the review of all visa applications from prospective students seeking to study anywhere in the country as it steps up background checks, including going through social media. It has also revoked visas and detained foreign students who it claims have been involved in protests, mainly against Israel over its war with Hamas in Gaza.
The campaign risks cutting funding for institutions that have grown reliant on fee income from the more than 1.1 million foreign citizens studying in the US. The majority of these students are from China and India. Foreign students are estimated to generate economic benefits of $45 billion (€39 billion) a year, according to the US department of commerce.
Nafsa, a network of universities and individuals engaged in international education, criticised 'an unacceptable assault on an already thorough screening and monitoring process [which] creates a climate of uncertainty and fear'.
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Trump v Harvard: University faces existential battle against opponent that would have once been unimaginable
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Amit Sevak, head of ETS, which runs the largest English language test for foreign students applying for universities in the US, said there had been a double-digit drop in the number of applications for the tests.
'What's happening right now with the fall semester just around the corner is that some international students may withdraw, delay or switch to applications elsewhere,' he said. 'The bigger implication will be in 2026.'
Harvard launched a fresh legal effort last week to block Mr Trump's latest moves to prevent it accepting international students.
'Contingency plans are being developed to ensure that international students and scholars can continue to pursue their work at Harvard this summer and through the coming academic year,' said Alan Garber, Harvard's president.
Mr Trump has focused his fiercest attacks on Harvard, which accepts 27 per cent of its students from abroad. But international students in universities across the country have expressed fears that if they return home for the summer they may not be readmitted.
Suzanne Rivera, president of Macalester College in Minneapolis, one-fifth of whose students are from overseas, has launched a fundraising campaign with alumni and is creating additional internships to support foreign students who decide not to leave the US for the holidays.
'Our concern right now is that these policy shifts may erect obstacles that would prevent students returning to campus or new ones from matriculating,' she said.
'The fear is widespread for the international students among us that if they go home they might encounter difficulties trying to re-enter even if they have a valid visa.'
New York University, Northeastern and Hult are among the universities with campuses in other countries, which allows them to reallocate places abroad to non-US students if visa delays persist. Several others have branch campuses in Qatar.
Martin Boehm, executive vice-president of Hult International Business School, said he had not yet seen any visa problems with prospective students. 'I'm still super confident that everything runs smoothly.'
However, delegating teaching to partner universities could produce complications because of different costs and academic standards, and uncertainty over whether students can receive credit for courses completed elsewhere.
Grant Cornwell, president of Rollins College in Florida, which has about 10 per cent of its student body from abroad, said the presence of foreign students provided more than just financial benefits.
'Those perspectives bring enrichment to the classroom that speaks directly to our mission: have students learn with and from people who see the world differently,' he said.
'Both current and incoming students are anxious as they await visa appointments for new issuances and renewals. We think there could be a chilling effect for the following years.' – The Financial Times Limited 2025

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  • Irish Independent

Irish senator who waved off Madleen Freedom Flotilla says crew predicted arrest

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Crimea was once a crossroads of civilisations, now it's stuck in a wartime cul-de-sac
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Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Crimea was once a crossroads of civilisations, now it's stuck in a wartime cul-de-sac

Every month, Ukraine unleashes three or four attacks on the Crimea bridge. The latest one, last week, used underwater explosives to try to damage the support structure, Ukraine said. Each salvo forces the bridge to close, disrupting the main artery between the Russian mainland and the Black Sea peninsula for up to seven hours. While official information is scarce, a channel on the Telegram app warns motorists to avoid crossing, as it did during another recent attack, because a 'hail of shrapnel' peppers the bridge when Russia's considerable air defences blast the Ukrainian drones. Ever since Russia seized Crimea in 2014 in a preview of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine eight years later, the peninsula has been a focal point of the conflict between the countries. Moscow says its conquest righted a historical wrong, and demanded in ceasefire negotiations in Istanbul last week that any settlement include international recognition of Russian control. 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Photograph: EPA 'No freedom, no choice – and on top of that, it's unsafe,' said a 35-year-old Yalta resident named Irina, who declined to use her full name out of fear of legal problems. 'It's like bingo, but in a bad way. It's a situation that people did not choose, but are forced to live in.' Crimea has been a crossroads for millenniums, colonised by serial invaders from Mongol warriors to Genoese traders. Catherine the Great annexed it for Russia in 1783, and the second World War brought a Nazi occupation. Josef Stalin, Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill met there in 1945, at the tsar's former palace at Yalta, to carve postwar Europe into spheres of influence. In 1954, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev transferred control over Crimea to Ukraine from Russia, an unremarkable move at the time, since both Ukraine and Russia were within the same country. In 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed, Crimea remained part of Ukraine until Russian president Vladimir Putin seized it. 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Several hundred people have been criminally prosecuted for political reasons since Russia took Crimea, according to OVD-Info, an independent organisation that tracks open court data. It also found 1,275 administrative cases filed against Crimeans accused of discrediting the armed forces, among the highest number of any Russian region. Defence lawyers for pro-Ukrainian activists can find themselves disbarred. Despite improved living standards, Crimeans rank below the Russian national average in income, especially as the war has pushed up prices, although some benefit. Crimean wines gained a new cachet after the European Union banned most wine sales to Russia, so the cost of vineyard land more than quintupled in four years, one vintner said. Tens of thousands of Ukrainians have left the peninsula, while a wave of Russians have emigrated from the mainland, although concrete numbers are elusive. Ukraine says acknowledging Russian sovereignty would reward aggression. Crimeans often react to the idea that a war settlement might include recognition of the peninsula as Russian with a shrug, although they would welcome the end of sanctions that restrict travel and deter outside investment. 'Honestly speaking, the majority of Crimean people don't think about recognition, because they consider Crimea a part of Russia,' said Lubov V Gribkova, a foreign relations adviser to the mayor of Yalta. This article originally appeared in The New York Times .

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