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Fear Down Under, huge drop in students to Australia
Mihir Mankad, Friday June 5, 2009, Mumbai

According to data available:

  • The number of Indian students in Australia increased from a mere 175 in 1994 to a whopping one hundred thousand in 2009
  • And out of the $6.5 billion that foreign students pay out in Australia every year, 40 per cent is spent by Indians

Indian students have been renowned to travel abroad for further studies but with the recent attacks on Indian students in Australia, are Indians reviewing their plans to visit the land Down Under?

G'Day Mate and Welcome to Australia -- words that normally greet hordes of Indian students when they land Down Under but this could soon be a footnote in history because the recent attacks on Indian students in Australia, whether racial or not, look certain to cause a dip in the numbers who fly south to make their careers.

"I expect about a 25-40 per cent negative impact, in the short and perhaps medium-term," said Hendry LeDlie, founder and Senior Global Advisor, IDB.

According to data available:

  • The number of Indian students in Australia increased from a mere 175 in 1994 to a whopping one hundred thousand in 2009
  • And out of the $6.5 billion that foreign students pay out in Australia every year, 40 per cent is spent by Indians

But a section of experts feel while numbers may decline in the short-term, the Australian government will fix this problem soon.

"I expect about a 20 per cent dip in the industry, but only in the short-term. I am confident that Australians will fix the problem in the long-term," said Ravi Lochan Singh, Ex-President, Australian Authority Education Representatives in India.

The Australian government has said that it is taking every possible step in order to ensure the safety of Indians and experts feel that it would only be a matter of time before the student flow would recover.

 
 
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Tags: Overseas Indians
Comments
Posted by Ash on Jun 10, 2009
The Srilankan Tamils have screwed it up for the Indian students living it on the cheap in Melbourne's dangerous areas such as Footscray. When the Tamils protested what was going on in SriLanka, they inconvenienced thousands of people in Australia, canada, UK and a few other countries. This raises an alarming scenario for Whites that the country is overrun with these students who intend to stay on after their studies.
Posted by Surajit Banerjee on Jun 10, 2009
Undoubtedly, recent attacks on Indian students in Australia is highly condemnable and stern action against the culprits is urgently needed without downplaying the facts by the responsible authorities. Despite strongly criticizing this incident, I must tell that Indians being in abroad or in India, we need to seriously introspect ourselves too! Still our social system, political system, educational system are caste-based, religion-based, region-based. The diversity of India which once was regarded as the spirit of the nation, strength of our motherland; today it appears to be cause of division, reason of disintegration which results various hate crimes throughout the country - that's the real issue needs to addressed and more importantly we should try to find path forward which is not easy task to achieve overnight. The question is: are we serious enough to eradicate such discrimination within our own society itself? If we ask this question ourselves, I am sure majority of us will say by heart "NO, we are not ready to leave the caste, religion, provincialism, regional identity". It is shameful to us, when foreigners ask very often about our caste system while we travel or stay in abroad. They remember Indian society by this black spot whereas we have so many bright things in our social structure. The fact is that black spot is so prominent, other bright spots become invisible to others. Therefore, blaming some other country entirely will not solve the problem for long run, we need to see ourselves in the mirror too.
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