CANBERRA, Feb 5 (NNN-AGENCIES) – The government of South Australia (SA) is urged to bring international students back on charter flights.
Chief Executive of the International Education Association of Australia, Phil Honeywood, recently called on SA to follow the lead of the Northern Territory (NT), to revive its international education industry.
The NT, in Nov last year, used a charter flight to bring 63 students into Darwin from Singapore. They were the first international students to enter Australia, since borders were closed in Mar, 2020.
Honeywood praised the initiative and said, SA should follow suit, describing the state’s current plan of having international students take seats on commercial flights, not filled by returning Australians, as a “lottery.”
“Because the number of returning Australians is constantly changing, it becomes something of a lottery for any state government trying to pick up so-called empty seats,” he said today.
“Charter flights are a viable alternative, which has been proven by the NT government and perhaps we really need to have that as an option.”
Prior to the outbreak of COVID-19, international education was worth about two billion Australian dollars (1.5 billion U.S. dollars) per year.
James Stevens, a South Australian federal government Member of Parliament, said, the “massive” industry was in jeopardy if governments do not push ahead with plans for more international students to enter.
As of yesterday, there were 28,838 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Australia, and the number of locally and overseas acquired cases in the last 24 hours were one and eight respectively, according to the latest figures updated from the Department of Health.– NNN-AGENCIES