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Jamus Lim criticises Trump administration’s move to bar Harvard from enrolling international students

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SINGAPORE: Workers’ Party MP Associate Professor Jamus Lim has criticised the Trump administration’s recent decision to revoke Harvard University’s ability to enrol international students, calling the move “utterly wrongheaded and counterproductive.”

In a Facebook post on Friday morning, Lim weighed in on the unfolding controversy between the U.S. government and the Ivy League institution. The decision comes after Harvard reportedly resisted demands to furnish information on certain foreign students. U.S. authorities responded by framing international enrollment as a “privilege, not a right,” and accused the university of fostering a hostile and racially biased environment.

Lim, an economics professor by training and long-time advocate of balancing foreign and local student intake in Singapore, expressed concern over what such coercive policy signals for education systems globally. While reiterating his support for prioritising Singaporean enrolment in local universities, especially in high-demand sectors like technology, he warned against “extreme, self-defeating policies” that isolate institutions from the international academic community.

See also  Jamus Lim Discusses High Living Costs with Childless Sengkang Couple

“Shutting out top global talent will ultimately undermine competitiveness, deprive students of diverse perspectives, and break the cycles of mutual knowledge exchange,” he wrote. “For any institution whose objective is to advance the frontiers of human understanding, this is not only detrimental; it is destructive.”

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Lim emphasised the importance of maintaining a “reasonable balance” between foreign and local presence in schools and workplaces, cautioning against adopting exclusionary measures driven by political expediency. He cited ongoing legal developments in the U.S., including a temporary injunction granted by a court, as reasons to continue monitoring the situation.

“There is always more to learn from the ideas of those that are different from us, and we shut those out at our peril,” Lim added.

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