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Violence against Indian students to cause enrolment drop by 95% in 2011, warns OZ professor | Melbourne University vice-chancellor Glyn Davis has warned that a number of racist attacks on Indian students in Victoria had trashed Australia's reputation almost overnight and could cause the number of students coming
from India to drop by up to 95 percent by 2011. According to The Age, at a press
conference with Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Professor Davis warned that the
quality of university education in the country was declining and added: ''Clearly
the perceived violence and actual violence in this city against Indian students
in 2009 did us enormous damage as a nation in India. 'There are a number of institutions
in Victoria that have heavily drawn on Indian students and they are feeling the
effect dramatically. The fall is predicted to be somewhere between 80 and 95 percent
in 2011,'' he added. He further said that Australia was the only country in the
world that was facing a sharp fall in the students' community, and that one of
the biggest reasons for this was the government's visa changes. ''The implications
of tightening up visas, and in particular the requiring of significant money in
the bank in advance to guarantee that you can pay your bills, means that we are
not competitive with the United Kingdom or with the United States as destinations,''
he added. The paper quoted Gillard, as saying that the government's visa changes
were aimed at the migration scheme, not at having a differential impact on the
education sector. ''Visa changes were changes to our permanent migration arrangements,
which we did because we want who we select to come in the permanent migration
scheme and the size of that scheme to be about immigration,'' she added. The international
student market in Victoria is worth 4.5 billion dollars, and is the state's single
largest export. In Australia as a whole, the sector is valued at 17 billion dollars,
and is the country's third-largest export. A 300-strong round of voluntary redundancies
was announced at Monash University on Wednesday as part of a 45 million dollars
budget cut, because of an expected 10 percent drop in international student revenue
in 2011, the paper said.
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