The suit filed by
several American Civil Liberties Union affiliates seeks to represent more than
100 students in New England and Puerto Rico. "International students are a vital community in our state's
universities, and no administration should be allowed to circumvent the law to
unilaterally strip students of status, disrupt their studies, and put them at
risk of deportation,” said Gilles Bissonnette, legal director of the ACLU of
New Hampshire. At schools around the country, students have seen their
visas revoked or their legal status terminated, typically with little notice.
About 1,100 students at more than 170 colleges,
universities and university systems have been affected since late March,
according to an Associated Press review of university statements,
correspondence with school officials and court records. The AP is working to
confirm reports of hundreds more students affected.
Students have filed
other lawsuits arguing they were denied due process. Federal judges have
granted temporary restraining orders in New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Montana,
shielding students from efforts to remove them from the US.
Plaintiffs in the new lawsuit, filed in federal
court in New Hampshire, learned without warning their F-1 student statuses had
been terminated, leaving in doubt their ability to stay in the country and
finish their studies, according to the complaint.
One of them, Manikanta
Pasula of India, was on the brink of getting his master's in computer science
at Rivier University in New Hampshire and applying to remain in the country
through a work programme for international students. Hangrui Zhang of China had
come to the US for a PhD programme in electronic and computer science at
Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts. Now, he cannot work as a research assistant, which was his only source
of income, the complaint said. The government did not give notice it is
required to provide before terminating a foreign student's legal status, the
lawyers said.
The Department of
Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Last month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio
said the State Department was revoking visas held by visitors who were acting
counter to national interests, including some who protested Israel's war in
Gaza and those who face criminal charges. In some high-profile cases, such
as that involving Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil, the Trump
administration has cited involvement in pro-Palestinian activism as a rationale
for deportation.
But colleges say most students affected by visa
revocations played no role in those protests. Many are being singled out over
minor infractions such as traffic violations that occurred long ago, and in some
cases the reason is unclear, colleges say.