Date | August 2019 to January 2020 |
---|---|
Location | US airports |
Type | Discrimination |
Cause | Tensions between Iran and the United States |
Deportations of Iranian students at US airports were a series of events that began in 2019 and continued until 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic began. [1] In this series of events, Iranian students, despite having a valid student visa, were detained at US airports and later deported. These expulsions have been on the rise since 2019. [2]
According to The New York Times , from August 2019 to January 2020, at least 16 Iranian students were detained and deported after arriving at US airports despite having valid student visas. [3] The American Civil Liberties Union reports that the largest number of deports came from Logan International Airport in Boston. [4] Some deportees have been barred from re-entering the United States and will not be able to apply for US visas in the future. [2]
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran has called the expulsion of Iranian students from US airports "illegal and racist". [5] The US government says visas do not necessarily guarantee entry into the United States, and people at border crossings are re-examined. [6] [7]
These events decreased in 2021 with the coming to power of 46th US President Joe Biden. He also ended the law banning Iranians from traveling to the United States. [8]
"Most of these Iranian students" say they were not informed of why they were barred from entering the United States. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection said that the reason for preventing visa holders from entering the United States was health, crime and security concerns, in which case the applicant must prove otherwise. [5]
Deported students have been asked questions such as their views on political events in Iran and their activities on social media. [5]
Officials at the Border and Customs Administration told NBC reporters that the reason for some Iranian students' deportation [9] was that US entry officers identified people with family ties to members of "terrorist" organizations and prevented them from entering US territory. [10] [11]
Several deported Iranian students said they were questioned at the airport by officers about their compulsory military service and accused of having links to the Islamic Republic of Iran's military and security institutions. [2]
According to Carol Rose, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Massachusetts, the reasons for the deportation of foreign students remain a mystery. It is not clear if this is a Boston Customs Office decision or a decision made by the Trump administration, because all of this is done in secret. The increase in this trend may be due to the fact that many students are entering Boston as it is one of the most important centers of higher education. Of course, some arbitrary agents may have made such a decision out of personal hatred of the Iranians. [12] [13]
According to Michael McCarthy, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman, [14] less than one percent of Iranian passengers arriving at the Boston airport were deported in 2019. He said the U.S. Customs and Border Protection has strict regulatory policies to ensure that the procedures for inspecting and reviewing passenger records are carried out within the framework of all constitutional and legal requirements. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection is committed to protecting the civil rights and civil liberties of any individual who encounters them. Its officers are trained to enforce US law uniformly and fairly, and not to discriminate on the basis of religion, race, ethnicity or sexual orientation. [15]
This issue, which has become more acute as tensions between the United States and Iran escalate, [16] is troubling for Iranian students, immigrant advocates, and for American universities. According to Terry Hartle, Senior Vice President at American Council on Education, university campuses are increasingly concerned about what happens at entry ports of the United States, because the deportation of students is unpredictable and seemingly random. These days, visas for international students are not valid until they enter the campus. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection said that due to changing health standards during the COVID-19 pandemic, etc. new conditions have been added to the country's entry inspections, and there is no guarantee that visa holders will be allowed to enter the United States. But NGOs, immigration advocacy groups and lawyers say this situation is beyond normal. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection has not released statistics on the number of Iranian students who have been barred from entering the country and have been deported in 2019 and 2020, saying it could not release details due to privacy concerns. [12] [17] [18]
When an Iranian MSc student of Northeastern University was arrested upon arrival at Logan International Airport and on the verge of deportation, protestors who had been informed of the deportation order closed the entrance hall of the airport and brandished signs with "Protect Iranian students" and "Stop discrimination against Iranians" written on them. They were overjoyed to learn that a federal judge had temporarily suspended any attempt to expel the Iranian student in a ruling, but when the case came to the forefront of national attention the next day, the Iranian student Mohammad Shahab Dehghani had previously deported against the order of the federal judge. It is a matter of great concern that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection has not complied with the Federal Court's ruling. [19] [12] [13] [20] [21]
According to Terry Hartle, the number of international students in the United States has been declining after a decade of steady growth. In addition to the fact that international students are no longer more willing to continue their studies in the United States than in the past, the process of deporting international students from the United States has become a concern for American universities. [12] [13] [20]
According to the latest government statistics, more than one million international students are studying in the United States, more than 12,000 of whom are Iranian. [13] [20]
Masoud Jafari Jozani is an Iranian film director, screenwriter and producer. He has received an award for the best short film at the Fajr International Film Festival. In the Wind's Eye is one of Jafari Jozani's most notable works, which he directed and wrote. This TV series In the Wind's Eye was the first Iranian film to be shot in the United States since the Iranian Revolution (1979) and one of the most expensive films in the history of Iran, with a budget of $12 million.
On January 11, 2007, the United States military raided the Iranian Liaison Office in Erbil, Kurdistan Region, Iraq, ostensibly to detain two senior Iranian officials, but captured five mid-level diplomats instead. The U.S. government's position is that the office was used by the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a local headquarters. However, both Iranian and Kurdish officials state that it was a diplomatic mission in the city of Erbil.
Iranian passports are issued to nationals of Iran for the purpose of international travel. The passport serves as a proof of Iranian citizenship. The Iranian passports are burgundy, with the Iranian emblem emblazoned on the top of the front cover.
Hamid Aboutalebi is a former Iranian diplomat and ambassador. Aboutalebi was previously ambassador of Iran to Australia, the European Union, Belgium, Italy, and a political director general to Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was part of Iran's UN delegation in New York City in the 1990s.
Confederation of Iranian Students National Union was an international non-governmental organization purposed as the students' union of Iranians studying abroad active during the 1960s and 1970s. It was more active in Germany, France, England and the United States, among other countries. The Confederation was a politically autonomous organization, made up by sympathizers of different Iranian opposition groups to Shah.
Presidential elections were held in Iran on 18 June 2021, the thirteenth since the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979. Ebrahim Raisi, the then Chief Justice of Iran, was declared the winner in a highly controversial election. The election began with the mass disqualification of popular candidates by the Guardian Council, and broke records of the lowest turnout in Iranian electoral history, as well as had the highest share of protest blank, invalid and lost votes despite a declaration by the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei, considering protest voting religiously forbidden (haraam) as it would "weaken the regime." Reporters Without Borders reported 42 cases of journalists being summoned or threatened for writing about candidates, and the chief of the police threatened people who discouraged others to vote.
The 2018–2019 Iranian general strikesand protests were a series of strikes and protests that took place across Iran from early 2018 until mid-2019 against the country's economic situation, as well as the Iranian government, as part of the wider Iranian Democracy Movement.
The 2018 Iranian university protests were a series of protests, a spillover clash of the 2017–2018 Iranian protests, occurring as part of the wider Iranian Democracy Movement, by Iranian university students in support of labour, and teacher strikes, as well as protesting against the current situation of the country. The protests started on 4 December 2018, ahead of university day on 7 December, which is usually marked by protests.
The several branches of the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran are represented by flags. Within the Iranian military, various flags fly on various occasions, and on various ships, bases, camps, and military academies.
Abr Arvan is an Iranian content delivery network and cloud service company. As of 2020, it provided free cloud services to 300 Iranian companies. It also provides VOD, radar, object storage, Infrastructure as a service and Platform as a service to its buyers. According to Donya-e-Eqtesad it provides the cloud ecosystem for Iran. It had fifty thousand clients in 2020. Based on W3techs abr arvan is the eighth CDN provider in the world.
The 2018 Iranian protests was a series of protests and massive nonviolent demonstrations across Iran throughout late-2018 against worsening tensions and deteriorating conditions as part of the 2018-2019 Iranian general strikes and protests.
Correspondence between Barack Obama and Ali Khamenei started with direct and confidential letters sent by US President Barack Obama to Iranian leader Ali Khamenei aimed at persuading him to negotiate. Ali Shamkhani, Representative of the Supreme Leader and Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran, confirmed that his country had responded to some of Barack Obama's letters to the Iranian leader, which focused mainly on the issue of Iran's nuclear program. This was the first time that Iran had confirmed such correspondence with the President of the United States. Earlier, domestic and foreign media reported on Barack Obama's letters to Khamenei, which in one case were confirmed by Hassan Firouzabadi, Chief-of-Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces, as a sign of the US government's realism.
Ali Atshani is an Iranian film director, film producer and screenwriter.
The phone conversation between Barack Obama and Hassan Rouhani took place on September 27, 2013 during Rouhani's trip to New York. The 15-minute telephone conversation was the first communication between the two countries since ties were severed in 1979. Hundreds of international news agencies and newspapers headlined their news coverage by telephone calls from Barack Obama and Hassan Rouhani.
The United States Cultural Diplomacy in Iran refers to the use of soft power of cultural diplomacy by the US government towards Iran in order to achieve its own interests.
Hassan Golestaneh, born 21 March 1983, is a world champion and bodybuilding coach and the first world medalist in the field of fitness from Iran. He is considered the founder of fitness and bodybuilding in Iran.
Starting on 21 September 2022, and progressing into 2023, an earthquake swarm occurred in the Iranian province of West Azerbaijan, close to the city of Khoy near the Turkish border. Due to mainly three events, a total of 3,880 buildings were destroyed and 52,301 others were damaged in Khoy, including nearly 1,000 schools. Three people died and over 3,310 others were injured, almost all of them due to panic and only a few from collapsed houses.
Ali Abdi is an Iranian human and women rights activist and former student activist at Sharif University of Technology.
The Amirkabir Newsletter is a student media outlet that began its activities at Amirkabir University of Technology in the late 1990s. Currently, this outlet is active on social networks such as Telegram, Instagram, and Twitter.
The Gaza War (2008–2009) was accompanied by the stance of many countries and organizations in the world. In Iran, the war were accompanied by the reaction of the people and government officials. The most important of these reactions are the Fatwa of Jihad by Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, and the sit-in and attack on foreign embassies.