ADVERTISEMENT

Indian students in Australia demand welfare measures

September 06, 2009 08:16 am | Updated December 04, 2021 10:48 pm IST - Sydney

Family members of students studying in Australia protest against attacks on Indian students in Australia, at Amritsar. File Photo: PTI

A body representing Indian students here on Sunday called on the Australian Government to take steps for the welfare of students stranded by closed private colleges and stop any kind of violence against them.

The Federation of Indian Students of Australia (FISA) said that the Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard should immediately stop “the spin on the state of affairs” within her portfolio of Education as it was causing great despair to a large number of foreign students.

The organisation claimed Australian Council of Private Education and Training (ACPET) and the NSW Government authorities had repeatedly assured the students of organising alternate arrangement within 28 days, but nothing had happened.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It is unfortunate that someone in the position of Deputy Prime Minister will lie in public. Her actions are causing great despair amongst students and eliminating their faith in the institutional robustness of Australian governance.” Hardeep Kaur student of an affected college (Sterling College) and a FISA Representative, said.

The FISA is providing support to students of the collapsed Australian educational institute that has left hundreds of students stranded.

Kaur said ACPET CEO Andrew Smith had told them early this month that the case of 300 Community Welfare students of Sterling College is now being dealt by the Education Services for Overseas Students Act (administered by Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations -- DEEWR).

ADVERTISEMENT

She said FISA sent an email to DEEWR authorities but they were still waiting for any response.

“The level of frustration amongst student is high. Many students are facing double jeopardy in that their visa’s and medical insurance have expired,” she said.

She also called on the government to consider human rights as a vital component of society.

“Any student death will be the direct responsibility of the negligence of the Deputy PM and her ineffective structures such as DEEWR and ACPET. All deaths that are avoidable must be avoided or they should be treated as killings,” she said.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT