Key Points

K Kavitha has strongly criticized the recent hike in H1B visa fees to USD 100,000. She highlighted the significant contributions of Telugu professionals to the US technology sector. The Telangana Jagruthi chief expressed solidarity with affected workers and warned that such moves would harm international relations. She urged Telugu people to maintain faith during this challenging policy change.

Key Points: K Kavitha Slams Trump H1B Visa Fee Hike to USD 100K

  • Kavitha criticizes Trump's knee-jerk reactions on visa policies
  • Highlights major contributions of Telugu people to US tech sector
  • Over 71% of H1B visa holders are born in India
  • New USD 100K fee aims to combat alleged program abuse by IT firms
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Will impact international relations: Telangana Jagruthi chief K Kavitha on USD100K H1B fee hike

Telangana Jagruthi chief K Kavitha criticizes Trump's H1B visa fee increase to USD 100K, warns it will damage international relations and expresses solidarity with affected workers.

"Such decisions will impact international relations. - K Kavitha"

Hyderabad, September 20

Telangana Jagruthi chief K Kavitha on Saturday criticised the United States increasing the H1B visa fees to USD 100 thousand, extending solidarity with any affected workers and highlighting how such a move will "impact international relations".

Highlighting the contributions of Telugu people in technological fields in US, Kavitha told ANI, "Telugu people have made contributions to the US in developing the country and making it a technologically sound country. Telugu software engineers and Telugu businessmen have made great contributions. Unfortunately, we have seen several knee-jerk reactions of Trump in the past 2-4 months."

She highlighted how people with a "scientific temperament" go to US, she expressed solidarity to the affected workers, telling them to have faith.

"Such decisions will impact international relations. India sends its talented people with a scientific temperament...To the Telugu people I would like to say is to have faith. Something or the other will come up. We stand with you," she added.

Earlier, US president Donald Trump's residential proclamation titled "Restriction on Entry of Certain Nonimmigrant Workers" imposed a USD 100,000 annual fee on H-1B visa applications. The measure, effective from September 21, aims to combat what the administration calls widespread abuse of the H-1B programme, particularly by IT outsourcing firms accused of displacing American workers and suppressing wages.

As of FY 2024, over 71 per cent of all H1B visa holders were born in India, with 283,397 people getting approved under the H1B programme, according to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). People whose country of origin is China are the second most beneficiaries of the H1B scheme, with 12 per cent of all beneficiaries.

In 2023, the USCIS received a record number of applications across all visa application categories, with over 10.97 million applications received in total, up by 21 per cent (9 million applications) in FY 2022. The USCIS completed over 10.8 million applications. Out of the total number of applications, the US approved 396,500 applications for H1B petitions across all countries. H1B applications comprise the largest share of non-immigrant worker petitions in US.

According to the US agency's Employer Data hub, H1B visa holders mostly work in the IT sector, with Amazon having the largest number of beneficiaries with 10,044 people. Tata consultancy services, Microsoft, and Meta also have more than 5 thousand H1B visa holders as employees.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Kavitha is right about Telugu contributions. So many Silicon Valley leaders are from Andhra and Telangana. This move will definitely strain US-India relations.
M
Michael C
While I understand the concern, maybe this will encourage more Indian talent to stay and build companies here in India instead of going abroad. Make in India should apply to tech too!
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Ananya R
My brother is on H1B and this news has our whole family worried. The American dream is becoming too expensive for middle-class Indian families. 😔
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Sarah B
As someone who works with Indian colleagues in tech, I can say they are some of the hardest working and most talented people. This fee hike seems discriminatory.
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Vikram M
Instead of complaining, our government should create better opportunities here. Brain drain has been happening for decades. Time to build our own Silicon Valley in India!
K
Kavya N
This will hit Telugu families the hardest. So many from Hyderabad and Vijayawada are in US tech. Hope our diplomats can negotiate this properly. 🤞

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