Indian students forced to wear radio tags

Authorities to keep track of their movements

January 30, 2011 02:02 am | Updated November 17, 2021 03:30 am IST - Washington:

After being duped by a California-based university, scores of Indian students in the U.S. are now enduring the ignominy of wearing radio tags around their ankles so that authorities can keep track of their movements.

The students, mostly from Andhra Pradesh, may also be deported as authorities shut down Tri-Valley University in Pleasanton, a major suburb in San Francisco Bay Area, on charges of a massive immigration fraud.

Interrogation

A number of students were interrogated by authorities and forced to wear radio tags fitted with GPS technology to track their movements.

“They [the students] were tagged with some sort of monitoring system placed on their ankles,” Jayaram Komati of the Telugu Association of North America told a private Indian channel.

“...it is none of their [the students'] fault, but the university is at fault as it violated some rules and regulations, because of which all the students are being victimised in this whole situation.

“We heard that [External Affairs Minister] S.M. Krishna is trying to talk to the State Department. Hopefully, this type of pressure will make this much easier [to resolve the issue],” he was quoted as saying.

An unnamed Indian student, who was among those duped, said the university was shut down all of a sudden.

“We don't know what is happening with the university and the U.S. government. We have been told that we are illegal immigrants,” he was quoted as saying by the channel, adding that 100 students of the university, which had a total of 4,400, were affected.

“We went to the local Senator and the Indian embassy. We also met the local attorney to help us but everyone is saying that this is the deportation process. People from the immigration office came to my room and said they needed some information about our college. Before going, they put tags on our ankles and said this was the tracking system.”

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley on Friday said any activity involving visa fraud would obviously be of great concern to the U.S. “The investigation of that is done by law enforcement, obviously with our cooperation, since we are the ones who issue visas.”

According to a federal complaint filed in a California court last week, the university helped foreign nationals illegally acquire the immigration status. The students are reported to have paid lakhs of rupees for obtaining a visa for their category and also for a student work permit.

Investigations by the Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) found that while students were admitted to various residential and online courses of the university and on paper lived in California, in reality they “illegally” worked in various parts of the country as far as Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Texas. ICE called Tri-Valley a “sham university.”

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