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America's Harsh Treatment of Foreign Students Will Haunt It
Mint New Delhi
|April 08, 2025
The country risks losing its appeal among the world's best minds
The arrest of Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish PhD student grabbed off the streets of a Boston suburb by immigration agents last week, marks a new low in American Homeland Security's overzealous pursuit of ever-larger deportation numbers.
The video of Ozturk's arrest reveals a violation of basic civil rights and decency that should sicken every American and frighten legal immigrants to their core. The scene itself resembles one out of a small paramilitary country.
An unmarked vehicle pulls up, masked agents in plainclothes emerge and accost Ozturk, who utters a small scream. One agent wrests her cellphone out of her hand. With stunning swiftness, she is handcuffed and escorted away.
Ozturk, a former Fulbright scholar, has been charged with no crime so far, according to her lawyer. Her only infraction appears to be a fairly mild op-ed piece she co-wrote with several other students for the Tufts Daily, in which they urged the university to take seriously a student government resolution calling on the school to divest from companies dealing with Israel and recognize the genocide of Palestinians.
In other words, a classic non-violent exercise of free speech.
Tufts President Sunil Kumar said in a statement that Ozturk's student visa status had been terminated "and we seek to confirm whether that information is true."
This story is from the April 08, 2025 edition of Mint New Delhi.
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