The US has said it will take action against over 300 Indian students caught in a sting operation for allegedly trying to illegitimately extend their stay in the country.
"For the most part, they all came on legitimate student visas. It was actually when they were in country that some of them sought here, and that's when they allegedly sought to extend their stay in the United States is my understanding," Mark Toner State Department Deputy Spokesman said yesterday.
These students numbering 306 were caught in a sting operation conducted by Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. As many as 21 brokers and middle men including 11 people of Indian-origin were arrested last week as a result of the sting operation.
Toner said only those Indian students who tried to illegitimately tried to extend their stay in the US will be taken to task and no genuine student will be harassed.
"These individuals who came here on a student visa did come either to work or to study
legitimately. They did qualify for student visas. They met the qualifications. They were issued student visas," Toner said.
"It was only after living here, attending university or whatever, that they then decided to again allegedly seek out the assistance of this criminal organisation to extend their stay in the United States. That's an important clarification," he said.
Responding to a question, Toner said these Indian students were issued visas by US diplomatic missions in India to study in well recognised American educational institutions and not the fake university created by Department of Homeland Security as part of the sting operation.
"They did come here legitimately, on legitimate visas. It's not about a visa issue. It's about once they were here in the United States, they then sought through a criminal organisation to extend their stay," Toner said.
Indian student trapped in the sting operation came to study at American universities as qualified students, he said.