Voice-out at Israeli continued strikes in Gaza, the Trump administration’s withdrawal for foreign students for student visas is spreading south.
Public and private universities across from the Sun Belt report that at least a few students have the status as welcoming scholars have revoked, as Texas A&M University and Florida International University have posted even bigger numbers.
Megan Bennett, a spokesman for Texas A&M, said 23 international students lost student visas at the facility.
Diane Fernandez, a spokesman for Florida International University, said the number was 18.
Other agencies that disclose the number of cancellations include New Mexico (9). University of North Carolina (6); Central Tennessee (6); Rice University, Houston (3).
According to Austin’s NBC affiliate Kxan, the University of Texas at Austin only says that “multiple” foreign students have revoked their visas.
The ongoing withdrawal under the control of President Donald Trump has spread across New York City, the Ivy League and New England University to several states Trump won in 2024, including Texas, Florida and North Carolina, but the political implications of his policy are unclear.
Last month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio estimated that 300 foreign universities and university scholars had revoked their visas by the Trump administration.
According to his wife Noah Abdallah’s account, the revocation policy attracted attention after being arrested outside his home on March 8 by customs enforcement agencies who supported the 2024 student protests against Israeli actions in Gaza and was arrested outside his home by his wife’s customs enforcement agency who lived on campus with his wife.
One of his lawyers, Amy Greer, said Abdallah, ice agent, is a permanent resident with a green card, but they took him away, but according to his legal team, he has not yet generated an arrest warrant.
On Friday, a judge ruled that the Trump administration could deport Halil.
Halil’s arrest and detention at a federal facility in Louisiana will become a cause celebrity and accus the protesters of instigating the nation and claiming it is the Trump administration’s lack of intention and explicit intention to silence free speech that they disagree with.
The Trump administration has endured a steady campaign in the campaign against campus protesters critical of Israel and the war with Hamas militants following the attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
Much of the war took place in Gaza. Gaza estimates that Israel and civilians were displaced and killed in large numbers, while Palestinian health authorities estimate that 50,500 people were killed there.
The Trump administration said it had the authority to deport Halil because it “leaded activities along Hamas, a designated terrorist organization.” However, his lawyers argue that there is no evidence that Halil provided any kind of support to terrorist groups.
Rubio also deports Halil in a letter citing vague provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, allowing only the Secretary of State to “personally decide” whether immigrants should remain in the country.
On Friday, a Louisiana immigration judge ruled that Rubio’s explanation was all he needed to see and that Halil could be deported. He will need to apply for relief until April 23rd. At the same time, he is challenging the foundations of arrests in federal courts in New Jersey.
The government’s argument over Khalil’s existence has expanded to include reasons not to be given first, including reasons why it allegedly failed to disclose important information about his residence application, but the White House is increasingly targeting foreign-born students whose main violations are likely to be activist.
“Every time I find one of these crazy people, I remove their visa,” he said last month in Guyana.
Representatives from some universities said they learned that the institution was teaching students whose visas had been revoked by checking the federal student and exchange visitor information system.
Bennett, a spokesman for Texas A&M, explained in an email that “Sevis’s end of record essentially ends the legal status of individuals within the country.”