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America's international students are facing deportation. This is a disaster

<span>Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP</span>
Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP

If you are an international student planning to study in the United States this fall and your classes are online, you might want to prepare yourself. Unlike students who are American citizens, you won’t get to resume your classes. You are looking at losing your legal status in the US. You are looking at getting deported.

On Monday, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) issued new rules to all educational institutions in the country. The new rules mandate that international students on F-1 and M-1 visas who are currently in their home countries will be denied entry into the US if their universities go online in the fall semester – as Harvard University, for instance, plans to do. Students who are already inside the US whose universities go online will also lose their immigration status unless they can immediately secure admission at another program with in-person instruction. If they can’t, they will be deported.

It’s hard not to view the new rules, soon to be published in the Federal Register, as an attempt by the Trump administration to exploit a global public health pandemic for racist and xenophobic political ends. Many of the students affected are people of color.

The rule change appears to serve two of Trump’s political objectives, both paranoid talking points for his base

Ice has not given a clear or persuasive explanation for the rule change. It appears to serve two of Trump’s political objectives, both paranoid talking points for his base. One is to limit legal immigration of “non-white” races to the US. The second is to force businesses to physically reopen to publicize a false sense of normalcy in the midst of a massive public health crisis.

While the overall number of international students in the US has been falling since 2017, international students make up 5.5% of the total student body of American colleges and universities. Undergraduate students constitute the bulk, followed by graduate students and those with optional practical training visas. The largest number are from China, followed by India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Canada. They pay an average of three times the tuition paid by domestic students, with research indicating that the high net payments from international students cross-subsidize domestic American students. According to figures from 2018, they contributed an estimated $45bn to the American economy.

But economic factors don’t capture their true contributions. International students embody the values of cultural and linguistic diversity on our campuses, values touted in all educational mission statements. In many rural university communities, for instance, international students are the faces of the world and sometimes the first foreigners domestic students have met. We learn from international students. They learn from us. International students in the US, like American students abroad, build cultural bridges between nations in an increasingly fractious and divided world.

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Part of the reason for these new Ice rules may be to force colleges and universities to reopen with the same indecent haste with which the Trump administration has pushed American businesses to reopen. In this view, educational institutions are businesses, and the restrictions placed on student visas force the hand of these businesses. While educational institutions thoughtfully try to plan for the fall semester with CDC mandated social distancing, disinfecting, testing, contact tracing, and by distributing personal protective equipment to students, staff and faculty, the president has been tweeting in capital letters: “SCHOOLS MUST OPEN IN THE FALL.” The threat to evict international students from our campuses appears to be an attempt to financially blackmail universities already poised on the edge of precarity brought about by the pandemic, as well as an attempt to exploit the pandemic to kick non-white immigrants out of the country.

Education should not be used to exclude and disenfranchise students. These extreme F-1/M-1 visa restrictions are an act of blatant educational discrimination. There should be no difference between a citizen student and an international student. The absence of either is of imminent concern.

  • Gayatri Devi is associate professor of English at Lock Haven University, Pennsylvania