-
Greece set new tourism record in 2025
-
Zelensky says Ukraine unbroken after 4 years, but Russia vows to fight on
-
Zelenksy says Ukraine unbroken after 4 years, but Russia vows to fight on
-
Snoop Dogg 'can't wait' for first Swansea visit
-
Stocks fluctuate as traders assess AI fallout, tariffs
-
Post-it maker 3M faces Belgian trial over 'forever' chemicals
-
UK comedian Russell Brand pleads not guilty to new rape, assault charges
-
Duterte drew up 'death lists', boasted about murders: ICC prosecutor
-
UK govt urged to release documents linked to ex-prince Andrew
-
Rights group slams treatment of viral Japanese monkey
-
Inside the bunker where Zelensky led response to Russian invasion
-
France demands explanation from US envoy over 'surprise' no-show
-
Putin failed to achieve goals in Ukraine, Zelensky says on war anniversary
-
China tightens Japanese trade restrictions as spat worsens
-
Ukraine war exhibition opens at Berlin Nazi bunker museum
-
Jihadist threat puts eastern Senegal on edge
-
Kim Yo Jong: the powerful sister behind North Korea's supreme leader
-
North Korea ruling party promotes Kim Jong Un's younger sister
-
Mexico's Jalisco cautiously tries returning to normal after cartel violence
-
Mexico's violence-hit Guadalajara to host World Cup games
-
Mourinho's Bernabeu homecoming upended by suspension, racism row
-
China targets Japanese companies over military ties
-
Griezmann in talks to join MLS side Orlando City: source
-
France to revoke US envoy's govt access after summons no-show
-
Spurs overpower Pistons in clash of NBA's form teams
-
Inoue to fight Nakatani in Tokyo in May: reports
-
Canada PM to push trade, rebuild fractured ties in India trip
-
Asian markets mixed as traders weigh AI and tariffs outlook
-
Votes may 'melt like snow': Reform, Greens eye Labour UK bastion
-
Venezuela says exiles welcome to return following mass amnesty
-
Australia buys parts for future AUKUS sub reactor
-
Ukraine marks four years since Russian invasion
-
Brazil court to try politicians over hit on black councilwoman
-
Interim president says Venezuelans welcome to return after amnesty law
-
Man kills police officer in Moscow train station blast
-
Despite drop in 2025, Russian oil exports exceed pre-war volumes: report
-
ARIA Cybersecurity Announces Major Oil Refiner Deploys AZT PROTECT(TM)
-
Greene Concepts Announces Major Be Water Expansion in Walmart Stores Across the Southeast
-
Fuse Battery Announces Amended Subscription Receipt Financing Details
-
Lightwave Logic, Inc. Provides Update on Commercial Pipeline and Announces Timing of Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call
-
Unlearn Advances Huntington's Disease AI Modeling Through Access to CHDI Foundation Data
-
Protagonist Therapeutics to Participate in Multiple Investment Bank Conferences in March 2026
-
Specificity (OTCID:SPTY) to Present on the Emerging Growth Conference on February 26th, 2026.
-
Havertys Reports Operating Results for Fourth Quarter 2025
-
Viemed Healthcare Announces Year End 2025 Earnings Conference Call Details
-
Galway Metals Drilling Intersects 9.0 g/t Gold Over 6.0m Beginning 15.0m from Surface at Southwest Deposit
-
PeanutButterJelly Expands Affiliate Marketplace From 15 to 40 Affiliate Merchants; Website Sessions Rise 70%; Launches Conversion and Growth Optimization Plan
-
Digipower X Announces Uplisting to Cboe Canada
-
Jaguar Mining Provides Update on Geologic Interpretation at the Chamé Gold Exploration Target, Brazil
-
Electrovaya Receives $10.5 Million P.O from Fortune 500 Customer
Foreign students wary of US as Trump presses 'dehumanizing' campaign
Donald Trump's expanding crackdown on elite universities is prompting some international students to abandon applications to campuses in the United States and spreading stress and anxiety among those already enrolled.
The president has upended the country's reputation among foreign students, who number around one million, as he presses a campaign against US universities he sees as obstructing his "Make America Great Again" populist agenda.
He has blocked Harvard hosting international scholars in a maneuver being challenged legally, targeted non-citizen campus activists for deportation, and most recently suspended student visa processing across the board.
Harvard applied mathematics and economic student Abdullah Shahid Sial, 20, said the Trump administration's campaign against US universities that the president accused of being hotbeds of liberal bias and anti-Semitism had been "dehumanizing."
"It's really unfortunate that this is the case for 18, 19, and 20-year-olds who came here without any family, and in most cases, haven't been to the US before," said Sial, who is from Pakistan and hopes to be able to return to Harvard next academic year.
Sial said he advised acquaintances to have backup plans if US colleges became inaccessible, and that a friend applied to Harvard's law school, as well as Columbia's, and two less reputable British institutions -- ultimately opting to go to the UK.
"He definitely liked Harvard way more (but) he doesn't want this amount of uncertainty surrounding his education," Sial said.
Karl Molden, a Harvard government and classics student from Austria, said Trump's move to block the university hosting and enrolling foreign students meant he was unsure if he would be able to return after summer vacation.
- 'In the dark' -
While that decision -- affecting some 27 percent of the overall Harvard population -- was paused by a judge pending a hearing Thursday, the move still threw student plans into chaos.
"I kind of figured I would be in the target group of Trump. I'm personally right in the middle of it, so an option for me would be to study abroad... I have applied to study at Oxford because of all the action" taken by Trump, said Molden, 21.
"It's just really hard."
Harvard academics say they have already started to feel the impact of Trump's vendetta against the school, in feedback from colleagues based outside the United States.
"I've already heard this from professors in other countries who say 'we encourage our best students to go to the United States'," Harvard professor Ryan Enos told AFP at a noisy rally against Trump's policies Tuesday, adding "we wonder if we can tell them that anymore."
The halt to visa processing revealed this week is reportedly to allow for more stringent screening of applicants' social media -- and protest activity.
"International students already represent the most tracked and vetted category of nonimmigrants in the United States. It is a poor use of taxpayer dollars," said the NAFSA Association of International Educators non-profit.
Trump meanwhile continued his assault on Harvard, saying university leaders have "got to behave themselves.
"Harvard is treating our country with great disrespect, and all they're doing is getting in deeper and deeper," he said Wednesday in the White House.
One Spanish student of politics and statistics, who declined to be named for fear of retaliation, told AFP she would not be deterred from pursuing her planned year abroad at Columbia University.
"It's scary, because we think to ourselves that all our activity on social networks could be monitored, for example if we like pro-Palestinian posts or anti-Trump posts. All of that could see us denied a visa," she said.
Students due to return to Harvard after the summer break are in limbo pending a ruling on Harvard's exclusion from the foreign student system.
"I'm completely in the dark," said 20-year-old Alfred Williamson, a Welsh-Danish physics and government student in his second year at Harvard.
"As for my other options, and like all other international students, I'm just clinging on to the hope that Harvard will win this battle against the White House."
Sial, the Harvard student from Pakistan, said foreign students like him were "made to fight this battle which no one signed up for."
"It's really unfortunate that it's come down to that."
A.Mahlangu--AMWN