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Kashmiri Girls in Bangladesh: ‘We Fear Being Left Out’

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https://kashmirobserver.net/2020/05/12/kashmiri-girls-in-bangladesh-we-fear-being-left-out/

Kashmiri Girls in Bangladesh: ‘We Fear Being Left Out’

Observer News Service | May 12, 2020

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Even as many Kashmiri students have been evacuated from Bangladesh, a lot of them have been left behind in the queue to face the mental trauma of being stranded in a foreign country.

Jyotsna Bharti

ALARM bells ring in pandemic when Srinagar-based newsrooms receive back-to-back SOS pleading evacuation. Senders of these disturbing dispatches are mostly Kashmiri students caught in the covid crisis in some faraway land.

One such mail came from Bangladesh on the afternoon of May 11, 2020.

The sender was a medical student stranded along with her classmates in the country where the viral upsurge has unnerved all and sundry.

“With all the due respect,” the mail read, “we the students of KUMUDINI WOMENS MEDICAL COLLEGE BANGLADESH would like to bring in your kind notice that we have been keenly waiting for the name in the list for evacuation and keeping an eye on that but the second list for evacuation has also been updated and nobody among us is in that list.”

These helpless students are stranded in a campus where Kashmiri girls are in majority.

“We fear being left out,” the distressed medical student said.

“Since already a number of colleges have been taken into the consideration, we all request you to please look into this matter as soon as possible. We would be highly grateful.”

A quick follow-up by Kashmir Observer reveals that around 85 girl students are stranded in Bangladesh’s Kumudini Women’s Medical College.

“Since the time our college got shut on March 16, we’ve been stuck here in the campus hostel,” the college representative told KO over phone from Bangladesh.

“We’ve been left out even as other students were evacuated from this, and other colleges.”

These distressed students had enrolled for the evacuation long back but never made it to the multiple lists.

“There were flights scheduled from here to Srinagar on May 8, 12, and 13, but none of our names figured in the lists,” the college representative said.

When these stranded girls approached Indian officials regarding their names being missed from the evacuation lists, they were asked to “wait”.

But as their wait lingers on, for over two months now, these girls are losing their “mental balance” to the Covid-19 trauma.

“Other than waiting for the fourth flight confirmation list, we can’t do anything else right now,” the student said.

“We feel so helpless and left out. We’re getting paranoid, depressed here. Our parents back home are getting worried for our well-being. We’re approaching you, so that the concerned authorities understand our precarious situation and bring us home.”

Even as these distant cries for homecoming are shrilling at the moment, the twin authorities in Srinagar and New Delhi are maintaining an oft-repeated official line on the growing evacuation outcry: “The matter has been raised with the concerned authorities.”

But as these Kashmiri girl students are endlessly suffering from pandemic problems away from home, the official response clearly looks far from ‘concerned’ and considerate.


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There are some good medical colleges in india...what forced these people to go to bangladesh to study medicine? I can understand a pakistani or afghani going to bangladesh for higher studies ..but its beyond me how and why an indian would go there( unless on some exchange program)
 
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There are some good medical colleges in india...what forced these people to go to bangladesh to study medicine? I can understand a pakistani or afghani going to bangladesh for higher studies ..but its beyond me how and why an indian would go there( unless on some exchange program)
I guess for the same reason half a million illegal Indians comes to work here . BD is better than India for them .
 
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how can you understand that for Pakistan?

BD medical colleges have better scholarships and programs for foreign medical students, this is what I have heard.

For a Kashmiri woman, BD is a much safer and understanding environment than the Islamophobic mess which India has become.

We saw that after mass protests of Kashmiris against article 370 in Kashmir, Indian universities were kicking out Kashmiri students, Indian were beating Kashmiris, and abandoned Kashmiris had to be helped by kindly Sikhs to return home.
 
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BD medical colleges have better scholarships and programs for foreign medical students, this is what I have heard.

For a Kashmiri woman, BD is a much safer and understanding environment than the Islamophobic mess which India has become.

We saw that after mass protests of Kashmiris against article 370 in Kashmir, Indian universities were kicking out Kashmiri students, Indian were beating Kashmiris, and abandoned Kashmiris had to be helped by kindly Sikhs to return home.
Amen, I couldn’t agree more brother.
 
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There are some good medical colleges in india...what forced these people to go to bangladesh to study medicine? I can understand a pakistani or afghani going to bangladesh for higher studies ..but its beyond me how and why an indian would go there( unless on some exchange program)
My area of expertise. Haha.

India has very few (ridiculously low) number of government medical colleges. Fee in these colleges range from a few thousand rupees, to a couple of lakhs. Anyone in the country can afford these. But good seats are available only for 30k students(pg) in these colleges. Then there are direct training hospitals (for pg only) with 30k seats. This is against 1,40,000 applicants last year.
The number of seats available for undergrad students in government colleges is low too.

So the other option =private colleges. Fee ranges from 50 lakhs to 75 lakhs for undergraduate courses, and upto 1.2 crores for post Grad courses.

It is cheaper to study in other countries. Even the American universities makes more sense then our private colleges.
 
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There are some good medical colleges in india...what forced these people to go to bangladesh to study medicine? I can understand a pakistani or afghani going to bangladesh for higher studies ..but its beyond me how and why an indian would go there( unless on some exchange program)
They couldn't crack NEET, these are paid med schools, god help us if anyone can become a doctor like that. And our system is not up to the mark, we don't have quality middle schools or high school education that we need to send students to take a test instead of looking at their academia as a whole.

BD medical colleges have better scholarships and programs for foreign medical students, this is what I have heard.

For a Kashmiri woman, BD is a much safer and understanding environment than the Islamophobic mess which India has become.

We saw that after mass protests of Kashmiris against article 370 in Kashmir, Indian universities were kicking out Kashmiri students, Indian were beating Kashmiris, and abandoned Kashmiris had to be helped by kindly Sikhs to return home.
Simple answer failed in the entrance exam looking for cheaper alternatives.
 
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I believe we should keep these medical students, granting them dual citizenship and set up local hospitals to let them practice at higher salaries (and maybe prohibit private practice after hours which is affecting quality of care).

Patients from Bangladesh are going to India (well-heeled to Thailand/Singapore) spending massive amounts of funds when we could set up cheaper alternatives to be treated locally. Already Bangladesh has one of the lowest patient-to-doctor ratio in South Asia. We should bring foreign doctors to Bangladesh to train local doctors rather than send patients to be treated overseas. A lot cheaper that way.

This situation is not sustainable. Too many doctors leaving and the brain drain has to be reversed.
 
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