|
Editor's Note:
The Saudi-American Forum would
like to thank the St.
Petersburg Times of Florida for permission to
share this article with our readers. It originally
appeared on February 15, 2004.
Foreign
Students' Toughest Test: Getting In
A complicated visa process is leading many, especially
those from the Mideast, to seek their education in other countries.
By Susan Taylor Martin, Times Senior Correspondent
Bo-Abdullah grew up in the Arab
nation of Bahrain, but he always planned to go to college in America. You'll get a better education there, his father told him.
By last December, the
26-year-old engineering major had completed several semesters at
Florida
schools. So he expected no problems when he went home for
vacation and applied for a visa to return to classes this
spring.
But what he thought would be a
routine interview with U.S.
consular officials turned into a stressful interrogation. Did he
know anyone who went to Pakistan
or Afghanistan? Did he know anyone who hated the United States? Why did he attend a certain mosque near his university?
That was Jan. 13. Bo-Abdullah
has yet to get his visa, forcing him to miss this semester and
possibly killing forever his dream of obtaining a coveted U.S.
degree.
"I understand why they are
doing that," he says about the closer scrutiny of visa
applicants, "but it's like they're shooting everywhere,
they're not aiming. They are investigating the wrong person if
they are looking for someone."
Bo-Abdullah is one of thousands
of young people - many from the Mideast
- who are paying the price for horrific acts committed by men
who claimed to be students but instead were plotting the Sept.
11 terror attacks.
Since
then, the United States
has tightened visa requirements, especially for citizens of
Bahrain
and other Muslim nations. It has also instituted a complex
student tracking system that affects all foreign students and
has forced the University
of Florida
and other schools to hire new employees and buy expensive
software programs.
Due in large part to visa
restrictions, the number of foreigners in U.S. colleges and
universities rose less than 1 percent in 2002/2003, the smallest
gain in almost a decade. And the number from Muslim countries
plunged:
Saudi Arabia, down 29 percent; Pakistan, 28 percent; and the
United Arab Emirates, 23 percent, according to the Institute
of
International Education
in New York.
In Florida, the number of foreign students dropped nearly 4 percent, to
about 27,000, with much of the loss also coming from the Mideast. The
University
of
South Florida
has only a third of the Saudi students and half the Kuwaitis it
had before the terror attacks.
If the trend persists, it could
be a serious blow to the U.S. economy, which derived an estimated $12.8-billion last year from
tuition and living expenses paid by foreigners. A continuing
decline in the number of Muslim students could be especially
damaging because many come from wealthy families and are not
dependent on financial aid.
But, critics say, there is an
even greater threat. Visa obstacles are blocking one of
America's most valuable bridges to young people of other cultures.
"Education is an area where
Americans and the people of the Arab and Muslim world have solid
common ground," said a recent report by a congressional
advisory committee. Since Sept. 11, "many of the best
Muslim students in the
Middle East
and
South Asia
have grown fearful of coming to the United States
..Security needs must be balanced against the importance of
changing attitudes toward the U.S.
through (educational) exchanges."
Foreigners studying in the United States
have long needed student visas, but the requirements have
increased since the Sept. 11 attacks. Two of the hijackers,
including alleged mastermind Mohamed Atta, enrolled in Florida
flight schools without the proper visas.
Since
last August, all foreign students have been tracked through a
sophisticated Internet-based system called SEVIS - Student and
Exchange Visitor Information System. It links colleges and
universities with
U.S.
embassies, consulates, the State Department and ports of entry.
Before foreigners can enter the United States, they must have documentation from their school and be entered
into the SEVIS system. Once here, they are required to report
address changes, reductions in course load and other
information.
The goal is to quickly identify
any foreigner who is "out of status" as a student and
may have darker ambitions.
"It's pretty impressive
they got this thing up and running, but by and large the result
is that everything takes so much time," says Lynn Frazier
of the University of Florida International Center. Her school,
like USF, had to hire three new employees to handle SEVIS-related
demands.
"I think the federal
government is just overwhelmed and they're not staffed to deal
with these things quickly and efficiently," Frazier says.
"Any time there's a problem, it's not that the problem
doesn't eventually get solved, but that it just takes so much
time and is so difficult for the student."
Even students who think they are
following the rules can be in for a shock. Consider Bo-Abdullah.
Because he still hopes to get a
visa, he asked that neither he nor his schools be fully
identified. However, the Times has
verified his attendance.
Bo-Abdullah first entered the United States
in February 2002 on a B-2 visa that let him stay here for six
months while he applied to colleges. He got a regular F-1
student visa that summer after he was accepted by a Florida
community college.
Last spring, Bo-Abdullah
graduated with an associate of arts degree and enrolled in a
Florida
university for the fall term. Before he left in December, he got
an I-20 form from the school - a document showing he is a
student there - so he could apply for a new visa and be entered
into the SEVIS system for his return to the United States.
But Bo-Abdullah never made it
that far.
In a brief interview at the U.S.
Embassy in Bahrain
on Dec. 15, a consular official asked him a few questions to
confirm he was studying in Florida. He thought he was about to get the visa, only to be told the
officer "went through his computer and saw something and
said, "We have to wire your information to D.C. You'll have
to wait for your visa and wait for our call.' "
By the time he was contacted in
mid January, Bo-Abdullah had missed the start of the new
semester. This interview took on a more suspicious tone:
"They asked me questions about my mosque and whether it has
anything to do with al-Qaida."
To his surprise, Bo-Abdullah
says, he was told the mosque had received money from a Saudi
charity on the U.S.
list of organizations supporting terror groups. Bo-Abdullah said
he went to the mosque only to pray and socialize. Bo-Abdullah,
who plans to be an electrical engineer, is now studying in
Bahrain
with hopes of transferring credits to his
Florida
school if he ever gets a visa. He is not angry at the U.S.
government, but thinks the visa obstacles are costing it an
important chance "to enlighten people about the U.S."
The State Department says the
refusal rate on student visa applications is only slightly
higher than before the terror attacks: 15.5 percent now,
compared to 14.2 percent then. But the number of applications
has plunged by 15 percent - many students say they are no longer
bothering to apply.
Mohajed Bayanoni, a 24-year-old
Jordanian, said the United States
normally would have been his first choice for graduate school
because of several factors: He had been to America
as a child and liked it; he has a brother and sister here; and
the United States is the leader in his field, computer sciences.
But since Sept. 11, Bayanoni
said, "I felt an atmosphere of prejudice, discrimination
and guilt by association sweeping America
against Muslim, Arab and Middle Eastern people."
Bayanoni decided to pursue his
master's degree at the University
of
London.
As more students opt to study in
other countries, "there is going to be a serious long-term
impact" on American higher education, predicts Catharine Stimpson, dean of the
graduate school of arts and sciences at New York
University. NYU, with 5,454 foreigners, is second only to the University
of
Southern California
in international students.
"We
have the greatest university system in the world," Stimpson says, "but Australia,
Canada
and the Europeans are aggressively going after graduate
students, and if you could get a very good degree in biomedicine
from Toronto
why go through a lot of hassle to come here? I think there
really is a long-term danger."
Indeed, the University
of
Toronto
has seen a "dramatic increase" in inquiries from
foreigners, especially Muslims, says Florence
Silver, director of student recruitment. Inquiries from Iran
soared to 630 last year, more than three times as many as the
year before.
For the first time, the
university has joined forces with other Canadian schools to have
a recruiter in the Mideast.
"The Canadian government is
encouraging international student education because it's good
politics, good economics and good education," Silver says.
"We educate high-level people from around the world and
that means we have high-level friends."
By contrast, many fear, the United States
risks losing its close ties to political and business leaders in
important Muslim nations like Saudi Arabia. Almost 80 percent of Saudi Cabinet members have graduate
degrees from America, but visa obstacles are forcing the new generation to go
elsewhere.
Saudi Aramco, a large oil company, has long sent
promising employees to the United States
to earn university degrees. In the 2000-2001 school year,
254 came here; last year, the number was 48.
"They were forced to send
the remaining students to countries such as Lebanon, Egypt, the
United Kingdom, Australia and Canada for their education,"
says Joseph Mahon of St. Petersburg, a retired Aramco
engineer who recently visited the kingdom as part of a survey
team from the National
Council on U.S.-Arab Relations.
"In the future, if this
trend continues, not only will the people sitting at the Council
of Ministers' table and the top executives of the Saudi national
oil company have less knowledge of the United States and its
culture, but we will know a lot less about them. It is not in
the interests of the United States
to allow this to happen."
Related Material
Getting
Back on Track: Saudi Study in the
United States
By Grant F. Smith
Saudi-American Forum Essay
|