Indian students duped in overseas college admissions scam
June 12, 2023More than 700 college students from India are currently facing deportation from Canada after their college acceptance letters — which were used to apply for Canadian study visas almost four years ago — were found to be fake.
The Canadian government has put the students' deportations on hold for the moment after New Delhi raised the issue with Ottawa.
However, many of the students say they are being victimized for fraud committed by visa agents and education counsellors.
Risk of deportation, students protest
The issue first came to light in March after several students in Canada applied for permanent residency after completing their studies and the Canadian border agency discovered that their documents were fake.
"This is not our fault at all. Look at the hardships we students have faced," Randhir Kapoor, a student in Toronto, told DW.
"If there are now investigations into cases of misrepresentation, including those related to study permits, why was it not checked then … why now?"
Lucrative business for education agents
Teaching experts are putting the blame on so-called education counsellors who come to India every year in an effort to lure students abroad — for a hefty fee.
The counsellors are often linked to substandard institutions, and not all of their clients are looking for an education.
"Many of them are looking for migration pathway," media educator Rakesh Batabyal told DW. "There is no due diligence on either side as education is a profitable business."
Pramod Kumar, director of the Institute for Development and Communication (IDC) in the northern Indian city of Chandigarh, said that the vetting of insitutions failed.
"Canada's education regulatory organization put the list of certified educational institutions in the public domain and the authorized agents in India issued a certificate that the concerned institution is in the published list of the Canadian regulator," Kumar told DW.
Kumar suggested that immigration authorities should deny visas for courses at institutions that are not on the list of approved establishments.
There have also been suggestions that the counsellors themselves should come under under increased scrutiny. But not everybody agrees with this.
"Clamping down on overseas education agents is unlikely to work, since much of this can be done remotely online," Gautam Menon, Dean of Research at Ashoka University, told DW.
"Approved universities directly communicating with visa offices with their lists of admitted candidates may be a better option."
Crackdown on overseas students
Indian students now study in 240 countries, according to India's ministry of external affairs. Canada, Australia, the UK and the US remain the top choices, but sizable numbers are also travelling to Uzbekistan, Philippines, Russia, Ireland, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan.
India last year surpassed China to become the country with the most international students in the United States.
Last month, at least five Australian universities placed restrictions on applications from Indian students from the states of Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.
Similarly, the UK government recently announced a new immigration crackdown targeted at overseas students, including Indians.
Britain has been trying to curb migration numbers for a while and is working to prevent people from using student visas as a backdoor to working in the UK.
Student visas accounted for the largest proportion of migration to the UK with 486,000 issued last year.
There is an urgent need to connect students who leave India for an overseas education with Indian missions in their host nations, according to Swaran Singh, professor of international studies at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, who pointed out that many students who travel abroad are unaware that their visa applications may have breached immigration regulations.
As part of their investigation into the fradulent college admissions, Indian authorities have so far arrested a travel agent from Punjab who is accused of forging dozens of international students' documents.
Edited by: Keith Walker