AA
+Text Size
- Small
- Medium
- Large
A prominent South Asian student group at Harvard has “strongly condemned” the Trump administration’s decision to revoke the university’s eligibility to enrol foreign students, terming it an “unwarranted and flagrant attack” and calling on varsity’s administration to maintain steadfast support for its international student community. In an unprecedented development, the Trump administration on Thursday ordered the Department of Homeland Security to terminate Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor Programme (SEVP) certification. “This means Harvard can no longer enrol foreign students and existing foreign students must transfer or lose their legal status,” the federal agency said.The Harvard South Asian Association (SAA) said it “strongly condemns” the US Department of Homeland Security’s recent decision to revoke Harvard’s Student and Exchange Visitor Programme (SEVP) certification, barring future enrollment of international students and forcing current international students to transfer. “Amid this unwarranted and flagrant attack,” SAA expressed its “unwavering support for our international community. SAA called on Harvard’s administration, faculty and students to maintain “steadfast support for its international student body in these turbulent times. To all international students: you belong at Harvard and we will stand for you.” “We stand with our South Asian peers and community members who have been adversely impacted,” the organisation said in a post on Instagram.
It added that international students bring integral and immeasurable value to both SAA and the entire Harvard community. Founded in 1986, SAA is one of the largest and most active student groups on campus with hundreds of members. It was built as a communal space for South Asians of all backgrounds, “most importantly, immigrants, international students and first-generation Americans. “Our members come from nations across the entire South Asian diaspora, and we strive to affirm their belonging and importance on campus,” it said. “If this decision by the current federal administration is actualised, Harvard will lose some of its greatest minds and kindest souls, and SAA will irrevocably lose its community,” it added. Currently, Harvard hosts a total of about 10,158 students and scholars from around the world across its schools. According to statistics on the website of Harvard International Office, there are 788 students and scholars from India at all schools under Harvard University for the 2024-25 academic year.
End of Article
Follow Us On Social Media
Previous
8 ways to cook sattu for energy-packed meals
Anita Hassanandani’s trendy blouse designs for her quirky sarees
Top 10 wildlife destinations in South America
10 countries with most reported car accidents: Is India on the list?
10 beach destinations in India for a dreamy “I do”
Keerthy Suresh’s ethnic looks are pure perfection
10 brain boosters you can do in under 5: Train your brain anytime, anywhere
8 healthy dishes to try in an air fryer
Mapped: 10 largest countries in the world by area
This bizarre purple frog with a pig nose exists only in India — Why it’s so special
Next
- 1
- 2
- 3
Amla water with turmeric: 5 reasons to consume it in the morning
As per Hindu shastras, lighting a diya before these 4 plants brings in good luck
Self-cleaning aquariums: Fish that can naturally keep your tank clean
6 symptoms of high cholesterol seen in body and face
Top 10 Schengen countries most likely to say ‘No’ to your visa
The untold style file of vintage Bollywood: When sarees sizzled and glamour was effortless
5 signs seen in our legs that indicate kidney damage
Numerology Predictions Today, May 23, 2025: Read your personalized forecast for numbers 1 to 9
8 types of storms you need to know about
5 Zodiac signs who never forget their ex (Even if they pretend to)
- 1
- 2
- 3
Taylor Swift and Tavis Relationship Timeline
Tired of too many ads?go ad free now
In Section
Entire Website
- Taylor Swift pulled into drama again as White House’s Karoline Leavitt breaks silence on Donald Trump’s controversial post about the pop star
- Harvard can’t enroll international students, existing foreign students must take transfer
- Donald Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’: Who gains, who loses, and who pays the price?
- India logs new Covid spike as cases rise in Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad
- ‘Ties are built on basis of sensitivities to each other’s concerns’: India’s strong message to Turkey, China for backing Pakistan
- Indian-American software engineer Vaniya Agrawal who ‘shamed’ Microsoft CEOs at company’s 50th anniversary celebrations, disrupts Microsoft event again
- NASA alert! A massive asteroid racing towards Earth at 14 kilometres per second on May 24; should we be concerned
- Denmark’s largest construction company returns keys of Tesla cars, says: We as a company have chosen to …
- ‘This is India, I’ll speak Hindi, not Kannada’: Karnataka SBI staffer sparks language row; CM Siddaramaiah calls remark ‘strongly condemnable’
- ‘Pakistani army sent message’: Jaishankar counters Trump’s claims, reveals what led to India-Pakistan ceasefire
- Taylor Swift pulled into drama again as White House’s Karoline Leavitt breaks silence on Donald Trump’s controversial post about the pop star
- Harvard can’t enroll international students, existing foreign students must take transfer
- Donald Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’: Who gains, who loses, and who pays the price?
- India logs new Covid spike as cases rise in Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad
- ‘Ties are built on basis of sensitivities to each other’s concerns’: India’s strong message to Turkey, China for backing Pakistan
- Indian-American software engineer Vaniya Agrawal who ‘shamed’ Microsoft CEOs at company’s 50th anniversary celebrations, disrupts Microsoft event again
- NASA alert! A massive asteroid racing towards Earth at 14 kilometres per second on May 24; should we be concerned
- Denmark’s largest construction company returns keys of Tesla cars, says: We as a company have chosen to …
- ‘This is India, I’ll speak Hindi, not Kannada’: Karnataka SBI staffer sparks language row; CM Siddaramaiah calls remark ‘strongly condemnable’
- ‘Pakistani army sent message’: Jaishankar counters Trump’s claims, reveals what led to India-Pakistan ceasefire
Tired of too many ads?go ad free now