Trump Administration Targets Brown University With Visa Revocations

The news comes a few days after the Rhode Island School of Design announced the State Department had revoked one of its international student’s visas

Brown University
Brown University
Raquel C. Zaldívar / New England News Collaborative
Share
Brown University
Brown University
Raquel C. Zaldívar / New England News Collaborative
Trump Administration Targets Brown University With Visa Revocations
Copy

One student at Brown on a student visa and a “small number” of recent alumni on post-graduate student visas have had their visas revoked. That’s according to an email obtained by The Public’s Radio sent by the Brown University Office of International Student and Scholar Services to its international students and scholars.

“We recognize that this continues to be a time of heightened anxiety and uncertainty for many of you and that this has only been further exacerbated by recent news,” the email read.

News of the revocations comes just three days after the Rhode Island School of Design announced that one of their undergraduate students had their visa revoked.

Brown’s Office of International Student and Scholar Services did not release the names of the affected student or the alumni on the Optional Practical Training (OPT) visa, nor the reasons the Trump administration revoked their visas. The OPT visa is a common way for international students to stay in the United States for a year following undergraduate or graduate studies. On that visa, they are allowed only to work in the disciplines they studied.

Inside Higher Ed has compiled a map of where over 600 international student visas have been revoked at more than 100 colleges and universities. According to their reporting, the number of revocations has doubled since last week. Academics have pointed out that this newer round of visa revocations may be targeting students from Asian countries.

During a March 28 press conference, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said only “a few” out of the previous round of revoked visas were not related to pro-Palestinian protests.

“Some are unrelated to any protests and are just having to do with potential criminal activity,” said Rubio.

These visa revocations appear to be the first among the student or recent graduate populations at Brown, though last month, a professor and kidney specialist at Brown Medicine was deported while attempting to re-enter the United States through Logan Airport in Boston after a trip home to Lebanon. The Department of Homeland Security said Dr. Rasha Alawieh was one of the hundreds of thousands of people who had attended the funeral of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

A European doctoral student at Brown who did not want to be identified publicly out of fear of retribution from the federal government said she sees this as a way to crush activism on campus.

“No one is safe. This is not to remove specific dangerous individuals, it’s about suppressing political dissent,” she said.

With band members straddling the Seekonk River, the Providence-based Moonlight Ramblers released a single about a driver hoping to get home on a broken bridge
From choir takeovers to Krampus markets, here are our picks for what to see and do across Rhode Island this week
From housing and health care to AI and economic anxiety, Amo says his party must reconnect with voters at home and present a stronger alternative to Trump
Facility owners and inspectors trade accusations over recalled sprinkler heads and missed warnings after the state’s deadliest fire in decades
Judge Patti Saris ruled in favor of a coalition of state attorneys general from 17 states and Washington, D.C. that challenged Trump’s Day One order that paused leasing and permitting for wind energy projects
Free programs across nine library branches bring holiday fun, hands-on crafts and thoughtful conversations — including a gingerbread house build-off, winter workshops and discussions on menopause and media