<Anchor>

Some time ago, after the US government announced that foreign students who only took online classes would cancel their visas and not give them new visas, there were cases where Korean students did not enter the United States. President Trump is urging colleges to reopen and teach for the sake of economy, and American universities and state governments are suing them.

Correspondent Correspondent Kim Soo-hyung of Washington.

<Reporter> On

the 8th, a Korean student attending DePaul University in Chicago, USA, was denied entry at San Francisco Airport.

The reason was that I had not yet enrolled in DePaul's coursework.

DePaul University, etc., is a case of damages disclosed in a lawsuit filed to prevent visa restrictions for foreign students studying online.

The number of U.S. universities participating in the Trump administration's suspension of visa restrictions has increased to over 200.

Eighteen state governments also joined the lawsuit.

The Los Angeles and San Diego school districts say they cannot take schools into bacterial culture dishes and will take full-time online classes.

[Austin Boytner/Los Angeles Superintendent: Students need to be protected. It's an urgent public health measure to stop the school from becoming a bacterial culture dish.]

President Trump confronted the presidential conspiracy theory.


[President Trump/US: I think there is a lot of political logic involved in school normalization. I think if they keep the school closed, they think they'll do better in the presidential election.] The

problem is that corona infections can be normalized and pour oil into the fire in severe areas. President Trump pushes without careful measures. I am just pasting it.

After reports of the fact that the director of the National Institute of Epidemiology, which had criticized the resumption of impatient economic activity, was actually withdrawn, President Trump evolved that the relationship was good.

(Video coverage: Jeongsik Oh, Video editing: Min Kyu Jeon)