A Texas institution, Navarro College, has turned down
admission applications received from countries affected by the Ebola Virus
Disease, the CNBCreports.
The decision, which is coming on the heels of global move
towards eradication of discrimination against people affected by the disease,
has already affected two Nigerians.
Kamorudeen Abidogun, a Nigerian who lives in Texas, said he
received two rejection letters from Navarro, a two-year community college with
a campus about 58 miles of Dallas. Abidogun has five relatives in Nigeria who
applied to the school and used his home in Richmond, Texas, as a US mailing
address.
The college was said to have rejected the applications,
citing confirmed Ebola cases in the country as the reason for the decision.
The letter says, “With sincere regret, I must report that
Navarro College is not able to offer you acceptance for the Spring 2015 term.
Unfortunately, Navarro College is not accepting international students from
countries with confirmed Ebola cases.”
But the college dismissed the claim, saying it only changed
its ongoing foreign student admission catchment in favour of China and
Indonesia.
Abidogun said his five relatives who applied to Navarro live
in Ibadan, Oyo State, which has not recorded any case of EVD.
Navarro talks about the Ebola virus on the section of its
website devoted to admissions information for international students, but it
does not mention any policy regarding its role in the admission process.
Idris Bello, a Nigerian who lives in East Texas, tweeted a photo
of the letter to bring attention to the situation. Bello, in an interview with CNBC, described
the college’s purported policy “embarrassing.”
In his tweet, Bello noted the irony of the school having
such a policy for foreign students when 26-year-old nurse, Nina Pham, in nearby
Dallas, recently contracted the disease after treating a Liberian victim Thomas
Eric Duncan.
After repeated requests for comments on the situation,
Navarro’s Vice President for Access and Accountability, Dewayne Gragg, sent an
email to CNBC.com.
The email reads: “Our college values its diverse population
of international students. This fall we have almost 100 students from Africa.
Unfortunately, some students received incorrect information regarding their
applications to the institution.
“As part of our new honours programme, the college
restructured the international department to include focused recruitment from
certain countries each year. Our focus for 2014-15 is on China and Indonesia.
“Other countries will be identified and recruitment efforts
put in place once we launch our new honours program fall 2015. We apologise for
any misinformation that may have been shared with students. Additional
information regarding our progress with this new initiative will be posted on
our website.”
When asked for further clarification, and to answer whether
in fact there had been a policy to reject students based on the presence of
Ebola in their countries of origin, Gragg said, “The prior email speaks for the
college.”
There have been no new reported cases of Ebola in Nigeria
since Sept. 8.
Out of 20 people reported infected as a result of contact
with the Liberia-American, Patrick Sawyer, who was in the country for a
conference with the virus, eight died.
But the virus was successfully contained in both Lagos and
Port Harcourt, Rivers State.
The containment of the disease in Nigeria had attracted
commendation from different parts of the world, including the United States.
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