An Indian student enrolled as a postdoctoral fellow in the US faces deportation after federal authorities said he was "spreading Hamas propaganda" and has "close connections to a "suspected terrorist", who is a senior advisor to the group.
Badar Khan Suri is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
Photograph: Courtesy Badar Khan Suri/Faceboook.
A senior department of homeland security spokesperson said that Suri, a foreign exchange student at Georgetown University, was "actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media".
"Suri has close connections to a known or suspected terrorist, who is a senior advisor to Hamas. The secretary of state issued a determination on March 15, 2025, that Suri's activities and presence in the United States rendered him deportable."
A report in Politico said that Suri, who was studying and teaching on a student visa, has been detained by federal immigration authorities amid the Trump administration's crackdown on student activists whom the government accuses of opposing American foreign policy.
The report said that masked agents arrested Suri from outside his home in Virginia Monday night.
A petition filed by his lawyer Hassan Ahmad said that he was taken to a facility in Virginia and is expected to be transferred soon to a detention centre in Texas.
Ahmad said in the petition that Suri is being punished because of the Palestinian heritage of his wife -- who is a US citizen -- and because the government suspects that he and his wife oppose US foreign policy toward Israel.
The petition says the couple has long been doxxed and smeared on anonymously run, far-right websites due to their support for Palestinian rights. The petition adds that Suri's wife Mapheze Saleh has been alleged to have ties with Hamas and once worked for Al Jazeera.
The Politico report cited a 2018 Indian newspaper article that said that Saleh's father, Ahamed Yousef, was a former deputy foreign minister in the Hamas government in Gaza. In the newspaper article, Suri is quoted as saying, 'My father-in-law left the Hamas government after its five-year term ended and there were no fresh elections.'
The incident comes less than a week after an Indian student at Columbia University, Ranjani Srinivasan, self-deported after her visa was revoked for allegedly advocating for violence and terrorism and involvement in activities supporting Hamas.
Srinivasan had entered the United States on an F-1 student visa as a doctoral student in Urban Planning at Columbia University, the Department of Homeland Security said. It added that Srinivasan was involved in activities supporting Hamas, a terrorist organisation.
The department of state had revoked her visa on March 5. The department of homeland security said it has obtained video footage of Srinivasan using the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Home App to self-deport on March 11.
The Politico report said that Suri's lawyer has filed a lawsuit for his immediate release.
The agents identified themselves as being with the department of homeland security and told him the government had revoked his visa, the lawsuit says, according to the Politico report.
The report added that according to Suri's petition, he was put in deportation proceedings under the same rarely used provision of immigration law that the government has invoked to try to deport Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate and legal permanent resident, arrested for his role in leading campus protests at Columbia against Israel.
The petition further notes that Suri has no criminal record and has not been charged with a crime. Ahmad said he had not been able to contact Suri as of Wednesday evening.
"We're trying to speak with him. That hasn't happened yet," Ahmad said.
"This is just another example of our government abducting people the same way they abducted Khalil."
According to his profile on the website of Georgetown University, Suri completed his PhD in Peace & Conflict Studies from Nelson Mandela Center for Peace and Conflict Resolution, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi in 2020.
He wrote his thesis on "Transitional Democracy, Divided Societies and Prospects for Peace: A Study of State Building in Afghanistan and Iraq" in which he underlined the complexities involved in introducing democracy in ethnically diverse societies; as well as challenges to project state building.
He has travelled extensively in the conflict zones in India, Pakistan, Balochistan in Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Kurdish Areas in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and its southern region, Egypt and Palestine.
He is an interdisciplinary scholar whose areas of interest are religion, violence and peace; ethnic conflicts and peace processes in Middle East and South Asia. He is working on a project that looks into potential causes that hinder cooperation among religiously diverse societies and possibilities to overcome those hindrances, the profile said.
The Politico report quoted a statement from a Georgetown spokesperson as saying that Suri is an "Indian national who was duly granted a visa to enter the United States to continue his doctoral research on peacebuilding in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"We are not aware of him engaging in any illegal activity, and we have not received a reason for his detention. We support our community members' rights to free and open inquiry, deliberation and debate, even if the underlying ideas may be difficult, controversial or objectionable. We expect the legal system to adjudicate this case fairly."