International Students Forced Out Of U.S. Amid Mass Visa Revocations.
Hundreds of international students in the United States are being compelled to leave the country as the Trump administration steps up its efforts to revoke student visas without prior notice, sparking outrage and legal challenges.
The situation has intensified following reports that some students were arrested suddenly, without explanation or warning. Many of the affected individuals claim they received no official reason for their visa revocation, and some were not involved in protests or charged with any criminal offence.
Immigration lawyer Dustin Baxter, who is currently suing the U.S. government on behalf of over 100 affected students, told CNN, “Not only would they revoke the person’s student visa – even if there was no conviction, if there was just an arrest, and sometimes there wasn’t even an arrest, there was just an encounter and maybe a ticket – they would revoke the student visa.”
A particularly chilling message, reportedly from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and shared by immigration lawyer Nicole Micheroni, read: “Do not attempt to remain in the U.S. The federal government will find you.”
In some instances, the first indication that a student’s visa had been revoked came not from immigration authorities, but from their university. Stanford University revealed that it discovered four students and two recent graduates had lost their visas only after conducting a routine check of the SEVIS database on 4 April.
University officials across the country say they were not formally notified of the changes and instead found students’ names listed in government records after the fact.
The aggressive enforcement comes as a broader draft executive order from the White House appears to signal a significant restructuring of U.S. foreign policy priorities. According to documents seen by AFP, the draft order proposes slashing the State Department’s presence in Africa and eliminating offices that focus on climate change, democracy promotion, and human rights.
Although Secretary of State Marco Rubio dismissed the draft as “fake news” in a statement on X (formerly Twitter), the document reportedly outlines a “full structural reorganisation” of the State Department, set to be completed by 1 October.
The draft, intended to reflect an “America First Strategic Doctrine,” recommends consolidating U.S. diplomatic efforts into four main global regions: Eurasia, the Middle East, Latin America, and the Asia-Pacific — leaving Africa out of the equation entirely.
Critics argue that these developments not only undermine the United States’ soft power but also threaten academic freedom and global cooperation in higher education.
As legal challenges mount and affected students face abrupt disruptions to their lives and futures, international education stakeholders are calling for greater transparency and fairness in visa enforcement policies.

