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Coronavirus: Unemployed Chinese graduates in US face hard decision to stay or leave

  • Recent graduates are facing the choice of returning to China or staying in the US amid massive lay-offs and a public health crisis

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A nearly deserted street in Times Square on Tuesday. Photo: Reuters

As Covid-19 gathered pace in the US last month, Amy Zhao lost her accounting job and then her visa status when she learned that she did not get picked in the work visa lottery.

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Resigned to what she saw as a streak of bad luck, Zhao planned to return home to China, but could not find any direct flights. Travel restrictions left her stuck in the US at the start of unprecedented uncertainty brought on by the pandemic.

“What surprised me was that I couldn’t find a flight back to China,” Zhao said, adding that the few flights available involved multiple flights. “There’s an outbreak in New York. A 50-hour trip involving multiple stops can put my health at risk.”

So she decided to stay and ride it out. After consulting immigration lawyers, Zhao applied to an English language programme at St John’s University – where she said she completed graduate school in 2019 – to maintain student visa status.

“I’m doing this only because I can’t return to China just yet,” Zhao said. “There are many opportunities in China, and I don’t want to miss them.”

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