Source: Press TV
A senior Iranian official says the government has managed to reverse a trend of brain drain that has harmed the country's aspirations for scientific and economic development.
Sorena Sattari, Iranian deputy president for science and technology, said on
Monday that students from top universities around the world were returning home
in quite unprecedented numbers, adding that a total of 130 students graduated
from 100 top-ranked universities of the world had returned to Iran between late
March and late July.
Sattari told the ISNA agency that figures related to reverse brain drain in the
four-month period, when number of arrivals are normally poor, showed a
significant increase compared to the previous years, adding that such arrivals
would exceed 1,000 until March 2020.
"We are trying to personally find these individuals and prepare the ground for
their return," said Sattari, adding that Iran's policy over the past years has
been to appoint those graduates to key posts in the economy and industry sector.
The official claimed that Iranian students were no longer enthusiastic about
gaining admission to Western universities mainly due to the expansion that has
taken place in Iran's higher education system.
The comments come against the backdrop of reports suggesting that Iranian
students are facing increasing problems in countries like the United States
mainly as a result of sanctions that came last year after Washington withdrew
from an international deal on Iran's nuclear program.
A report by the Reuters agency last year showed that the number of visas granted
to Iranian students by the US government had dropped by 23 percent until
November when the sanctions on Iran were going to be implemented.
Sattari said the number of admissions for Iranian students in the US had
decreased significantly last year, adding that a total of 1,400 people had been
granted F1 student visas and another 450 people received J1 visas, which is
normally given to research scholars and professors.