pakistani342
SENIOR MEMBER
I guess all is not hunky dory for Afghans studying in India -- article here, excerpts below:
Khalid Yousafzai has been in India for three years. As a Fulbright scholar of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, he was fortunate to realise his long-cherished dream of studying in India. Far from the maddening din of war and violence in Afghanistan, the 21-year-old focused on his academic pursuits and earned a degree from Jamia Millia Islamia University.
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But not everything is ideal. Hunting for an affordable paying guest accommodation can be daunting in Delhi. Like students from Kashmir and North East India, Afghan students face problems while house-hunting. “It is difficult initially because landlords do not trust you easily, so most of us have to opt for university accommodations, whether we like it or not,” said Fazel Haq, a Master’s student at Jamia Millia Islamia University.
Haq, 23, recalls an incident from last year when he went on a trip to Shimla with his friends and struggled to rent a hotel room. “They looked at us with suspicion,” says Haq. “When they got to know we are Afghans, they asked us to leave the hotel premises.”
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Afghan students are often asked questions in India about Taliban and Al Qaida. “People must understand that we are the victims of terrorism, not the perpetrators,” said Haq. He adds that some Indians take Afghanistan as a nation of warmongers. “I have often been asked if I know Osama, can I operate an AK-47, have I been to Tora Bora.”
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Both Maiwand and Haq are not too fond of Pakistan. “It is no secret that Pakistan is fomenting trouble in Afghanistan through Taliban, but the international community remains a mute spectator,” said Haq. “They force so-called jihad on Afghans.”
Khalid Yousafzai has been in India for three years. As a Fulbright scholar of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, he was fortunate to realise his long-cherished dream of studying in India. Far from the maddening din of war and violence in Afghanistan, the 21-year-old focused on his academic pursuits and earned a degree from Jamia Millia Islamia University.
...
But not everything is ideal. Hunting for an affordable paying guest accommodation can be daunting in Delhi. Like students from Kashmir and North East India, Afghan students face problems while house-hunting. “It is difficult initially because landlords do not trust you easily, so most of us have to opt for university accommodations, whether we like it or not,” said Fazel Haq, a Master’s student at Jamia Millia Islamia University.
Haq, 23, recalls an incident from last year when he went on a trip to Shimla with his friends and struggled to rent a hotel room. “They looked at us with suspicion,” says Haq. “When they got to know we are Afghans, they asked us to leave the hotel premises.”
...
Afghan students are often asked questions in India about Taliban and Al Qaida. “People must understand that we are the victims of terrorism, not the perpetrators,” said Haq. He adds that some Indians take Afghanistan as a nation of warmongers. “I have often been asked if I know Osama, can I operate an AK-47, have I been to Tora Bora.”
...
Both Maiwand and Haq are not too fond of Pakistan. “It is no secret that Pakistan is fomenting trouble in Afghanistan through Taliban, but the international community remains a mute spectator,” said Haq. “They force so-called jihad on Afghans.”