US Take Backs Order Denying Visas to Foreign Students

New York: The United States government took back its controversial decision to revoke foreign student visas for those whose courses were being taught online due to coronavirus, a federal judge said lastTuesday.

The universities of Harvard and MIT — with the support of a number of other institutions, teachers' unions and at least 18 US states — had taken legal action against the move that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced on July 6.

"The government has agreed to rescind" the decision as well as any implementation of the directive, Judge Allison Burroughs said in a brief hearing.

Harvard and MIT earlier this month had asked the court to block the order announced by ICE that students must leave the country if their classes are only online, or transfer to a school offering in-person tuition.

The measure was seen as a move by administration to put pressure on educational institutions that are adopting a cautious approach to reopening amid the global COVID-19 pandemic.

The universities say in their lawsuit that the order would harm students "immensely," both personally and financially.

It describes the order as "arbitrary and capricious" and says it threw US higher education "into chaos."

There were more than one million international students in the US for the 2018-19 academic year, according to the Institute of International Education (IIE).

The court gave no reason for the Trump administration's flip, and the president did not immediately react Tuesday.

"We are thrilled that the government backed down," said the University of Southern California in a statement.

"Our international students are a vital part of the USC community, and they deserve the right to continue their education without risk of deportation."

'Attack on students': Most US colleges and universities have not yet announced their plans for the fall semester but Harvard has said all its classes for the 2020-21 academic year will be conducted online "with rare exceptions."

Some 40% of undergraduates will be allowed to return to campus, but their instruction will be conducted remotely.

It says packed classrooms endanger the health of students and teachers.

President Trump has branded the decision "ridiculous" as he takes a bullish approach to reopening the country ahead of November's presidential vote, when he seeks reelection.

Despite the continued progression of coronavirus throughout the United States — which has confirmed more than 3.4 million cases, with more than 136,000 deaths — Trump has aggressively insisted that schools must open this fall.

The US president has threatened to withhold federal funding from schools that refuse to reopen and criticized guidelines from the US Centers for Disease Control for the safe reopening of educational institutions, saying they are too rigid and expensive.

 

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Editor: Akhtar M. Faruqui
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