
-
Over 14 million people could die from US foreign aid cuts: study
-
End of the line for Britain's royal train
-
FIFPro warns of 'wake-up call' over extreme heat at Club World Cup
-
Sean Combs sex trafficking jury ends first day without decision
-
Fluminense stun Inter Milan to reach Club World Cup quarters
-
Thailand's ruling political dynasty faces day of legal peril
-
NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix
-
Trump dismantles Syria sanctions program as Israel ties eyed
-
Meta's AI talent war raises questions about strategy
-
Twenty bodies, some headless, found in Mexican cartel bastion
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill over 50 as ceasefire calls mount
-
Alcaraz survives scare, Sabalenka cruises on Wimbledon's hottest opening day
-
Only Messi can shirk defending: warns Monterrey coach before Dortmund clash
-
White House says Canada 'caved' to Trump on tech tax
-
Eight-country coalition aims to tax luxury air travel
-
Wimbledon qualifier Tarvet vows to get creative with expenses
-
Iran unleashes 'wave of repression' after Israel war: activists
-
Alcaraz survives Fognini scare to launch Wimbledon title defence
-
Peace deal with Rwanda opens way to 'new era', says DR Congo president
-
Kneecap, Bob Vylan Glastonbury sets spark police probe and global criticism
-
'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill 48 as ceasefire calls mount
-
Sabalenka boosted by hitting with Djokovic and Sinner at Wimbledon
-
Nigeria theme park offers escape from biting economy
-
Jury considers verdict in Sean Combs sex trafficking trial
-
Wall Street stocks rally further on trade and tax deal optimism
-
Sabalenka cruises on Wimbledon's hottest opening day as Alcaraz launches title bid
-
Bosch breaks through as South Africa set Zimbabwe huge target
-
S.Africa's ex-transport bosses charged over Zuma-era graft case
-
'No panic' says Medvedev after shock Wimbledon exit
-
Rescuers evacuate 50,000 as Turkey battles wildfires
-
ADB acting on US concerns over China, bank chief tells AFP
-
Archer misses out as England unchanged for second India Test
-
US Senate begins nail-biting vote on Trump spending bill
-
Top seed Sabalenka cruises into Wimbledon second round
-
Medvedev suffers shock early Wimbledon exit
-
Wall Street stocks rally further on trade deal optimism
-
Britain's Tarvet says 'not here for the money' after landmark Wimbledon win
-
Tennis fans sizzle as heatwave hits Wimbledon
-
Tearful Jabeur forced to retire from Wimbledon first-round clash
-
No relief for Southern Europe as punishing heatwave persists
-
PKK disarmament process to begin early July: report
-
Alcaraz, Sabalenka in action on day one at sizzling Wimbledon
-
France court jails migrant smugglers over 2022 Channel deaths
-
Stocks muted as investors eye US trade talks
-
China says aircraft carriers conduct combat training in Pacific
-
NGO loses bid to block UK export of military equipment to Israel
-
Three talking points from Austrian Grand Prix
-
Wimbledon 'ready' for soaring temperatures
-
UN chief urges aid surge in world of 'climate chaos, raging conflicts'

'Terrible' plight of international students who fled Ukraine
Korrine was a second-year medical student in the city of Dnipro in eastern Ukraine when Russia invaded last year.
The 27-year-old, from Leicester in central England, fled the country along with a group of Zimbabwean students.
"When it actually started kicking off, I realised we were on our own," she told AFP.
Before the war, Korrine was among tens of thousands of international students in Ukraine, many from developing countries, who paid relatively low fees for courses such as medicine and dentistry.
After fleeing the country, they have found they cannot access the same benefits and rights as exiled Ukrainians.
Since returning to Leicester, Korrine has been left in limbo unable to continue her studies.
A naturalised British woman born in Zimbabwe who uses the moniker Korrine online, she asked for her real name to be withheld after receiving racist abuse when discussing her plight.
Meanwhile, her former international classmates who also left Dnipro are now "in a terrible situation," she said.
"Most of them are homeless, they've just been trying to go from place to place."
She has taken up their cause, contacting UK universities, engaging with the United Nations as a "youth champion" and meeting Ukraine's education minister.
"It's just been a lot of knocking on doors and having them slammed in your face," Korrine added.
"We experienced the same thing (as Ukrainians). We were living in the same country. Why is it that there's no empathy?
"A lot of the students can't go back to their own countries."
- 'Racism' -
Before the war, Ukraine had some 76,000 international students, often from African countries, in a practice dating back to the Soviet era, according to Catherine Gladwell, chief executive of the charity Refugee Education UK.
There were "significant" numbers of Nigerian and Moroccan students, as well as those from Ghana, Zimbabwe and India, she said.
After the outbreak of the conflict, Ukrainian students could access British universities on the same terms as full citizens.
But for Ukraine's former international students, "even getting to the UK is a major challenge", said Gladwell. "They don't have a safe and legal route."
If they do somehow make it, they are not eligible to study on the terms offered to Britons and Ukrainians, who are charged lower fees than international students and have access to special loans, Gladwell said.
She cited the example of an Afghan student who managed to escape the 2021 Taliban takeover and transfer to Ukraine, only to have to flee again last year.
While Ukrainian classmates could transfer to the UK, "this Afghan student hasn't been able to access any of that, despite having experienced a double displacement."
"We've seen a lot of lack of awareness," Gladwell said, while Korrine argued the "demographic" matters.
"When it comes to black and brown issues, unfortunately it's always at the bottom of the list," she said.
"I didn't think that as a society we were so governed by racism."
- 'Nothing to show' -
Ukraine's displaced international students have found themselves largely excluded from UK scholarships for those fleeing war.
The University of Manchester in northern England is a rare exception.
Nalin Thakkar, vice-president for social responsibility, told AFP their scholarship is available to "any student, anywhere, from any conflict zone".
But he added: "We only had one applicant (from nearly 1,000) who was a student in Ukraine but from elsewhere."
This is likely due to international students in Ukraine often studying medicine and dentistry, which the scholarship does not cover.
Korrine said she is trying to accept that her dream of becoming a doctor is over.
She first considered going to eastern Europe while studying nursing in Leicester, after meeting a doctor who had studied in Bulgaria.
She was attracted by the lower fees for medical training, since her family's resources were limited after arriving in the UK as asylum-seekers.
In a fresh blow since leaving Ukraine, she learnt that the UK's General Medical Council (GMC) has stopped accepting medical qualifications from the Dnipro school.
The GMC told AFP "some students had been awarded a degree following a pattern of study that meant they had not completed a full medical degree." It stressed that the ban was "for reasons completely unconnected to the war in Ukraine".
But the decision has devastated Korrine.
"All my hard work, I've got nothing to show for it," she said.
video-am/jj/fg
S.F.Warren--AMWN