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In Remote Canada, a College Becomes a Magnet for Indian Students

The country’s public colleges and universities increasingly rely on international students, especially from India, even as tensions between the two nations have flared.

On a college campus in northern Canada, eight hours by car from Toronto, most of the students who fill the classrooms are from a country half a world away: India.

The young men and women stretching on mats in the gymnasium are more likely to be from Punjab or Gujarat, two Indian states, rather than rural Ontario. Hindi and Punjabi drowned out English in the cafeteria’s lunchtime cacophony.

In the surrounding city of Timmins, the waiters at two new Indian restaurants do not ask customers how spicy they want their dishes. A shuttered bar named Gibby’s has been reopened as a Sikh temple, or gurdwara, where students from the school, Northern College, gathered on a recent evening.

Just another facet of the mass immigration scam, similar to the ‘Temporary Foreign Workers” con. Whether captains of industry or college administrations it’s all done for monetary gain by a few at your expense.

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