Overseas students rely on UK food banks in virus jobs shutdown
The evaporation of part-time jobs and other support for hundreds of thousands of international students in the UK has left many so desperate they rely on food handouts, organisations working with them have warned.
The challenges are particularly prevalent in parts of east London where the Newham Community Project, a mosque-based charity, provides food to more than 1,300 students every week. Students from relatively poor backgrounds in countries such as India and China who rely on part-time jobs to cover basic expenses, are among the worst affected.
In the 2018-19 academic year — the last for which figures are available — overseas students accounted for 20 per cent of those studying in UK higher education, with people from outside the EU paying annual fees of between £14,000 and £20,000.
While there are no official statistics on the problem, in a joint survey of 124 international students by two groups — the Migrants’ Rights Network and Unis Resist Border Controls — more than half said they were destitute or at risk of becoming destitute. There were 485,600 overseas students at UK universities in 2018-19, according to the Higher Education Statistics Agency, with 343,000 from non-EU countries such as China and India.
Sanaz Raji, a member of Unis Resist Border Controls, which campaigns for international students’ rights, said the issue was a “big problem”. She blamed successive UK governments for barring people living in Britain on time-limited visas from receiving public money such as social security benefits.
“It’s a horrible situation that they’re in,” Ms Raji said of the students.
However, Universities UK, which represents the higher education sector, said it was committed to supporting all students, including those from outside the UK, who might be facing challenges as a result of Covid-19.
“Universities, who recognise the financial pressures the pandemic has placed on students, are providing increased financial support and ensuring continued wellbeing support as a result,” the group said.
The challenges were evident last week outside the vacant shop in Forest Gate, east London, where the Newham Community Project hands out food parcels to students, mostly from India. A steady stream of people brought shopping trolleys, bicycles and holdalls to collect supplies such as cooking oil, fruit juice and rice.
Elyas Ismail, organiser of the service, said it was helping students from about 20 institutions. For many of them, the job shortage had exacerbated problems resulting from the pandemic’s effect on their families’ ability to fund their education. “Since the pandemic, many of them haven’t got the work to repay their expenses,” Mr Ismail said.
Mohammed Zeeshan, from Kerala, in southern India, who was collecting supplies for himself and his wife, said he was paying £14,000 for a one-year masters degree in big data from the University of Greenwich that was now entirely online.
Elsewhere in the queue there was a student from BPP University, a private institution in Shepherd’s Bush, and one from the University of East London, whose students Mr Ismail said made up the biggest single group of service users.
Mr Zeeshan said the Newham project had helped him negotiate with the university for an extension to the deadline to pay his fees. “Without them, this would be really difficult — especially for students like us,” Mr Zeeshan said.
Sanam Arora, chairwoman of the National Indian Students and Alumni Union UK, acknowledged some institutions had been “exceptionally good” to overseas students.
Amanda Broderick, UEL’s vice-chancellor, said her institution had set up a hardship fund of more than £1m to help students through the pandemic.
However, Ms Arora said the response of universities in general had been a “mixed bag”. “There have been some where the behaviour has been really, really disappointing,” she said.
Published at Sun, 17 Jan 2021 18:21:02 +0000
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