With the radio tagging of Indian students duped by a fake university in US triggering outrage in India, India Tuesday said it will ask Washington how such a "dubious" institute was allowed to function. The issue is set to dominate talks when Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao travels to the US later this month.
"We will be taking it up with the educational authorities in the US as to how they allowed the university to function, how it was allowed to dupe gullible Indian students," said Indian External Affairs Minister Krishna while terming the Tri-Valley university as "dubious".
Two days after he strongly condemned the radio tagging as "inhuman", Krishna, however, sought to cool the tempers saying the matter related to only "12 to 18 students" out of over 100,000 Indian students studying in the US.
"There are about 1.8 lakh Indian students in the United States of America. And we are now talking about these 12 or 18 students who have been subjected to this treatment," Krishna said when asked about the radio tagging of Indian students.
"I would appeal to the people of the country and to the media in particular that we should look at it in the larger perspective of these one lakh (100,000) and odd Indian students who are pursuing their studies in various universities," he said.
Some 1,555 students of Tri-Valley University, 90 percent of them from India, mostly Andhra Pradesh, face the prospect of deportation following the closure of the university in Pleasanton, California, on charges of selling student visas.
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