A major educational crisis is unfolding across the United Kingdom as several Ghanaian PhD students have begun formal withdrawals from their doctoral programmes.
The mass exodus is a result of the Ghanaian government’s protracted failure to settle outstanding tuition fees and living stipends through the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat.
In a desperate escalation, the Executive Body of the PhD Cohort-UK has convened an emergency session, resolving to launch a sustained series of demonstrations across major UK cities and at the Ghana High Commission in Belgrave Square, London.
The crisis follows nearly two years of “financial neglect”, during which many students have been left with mounting debts, eviction notices from student housing, and blocked access to university resources.
Despite numerous petitions sent to the Office of the President at the Jubilee House and the Ministry of Finance, the financial obligations to UK universities remain unhonoured.
The situation has reached a breaking point, with university administrators in the UK reportedly issuing “final warnings” to Ghanaian scholars.
Unlike previous years, where “letters of comfort” from the Secretariat were accepted, many UK institutions—facing their own budgetary pressures—are now demanding immediate settlement or the termination of student visas.
Having exhausted local avenues, the students took the extraordinary step of petitioning the UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer.
The petition urged the British government to intervene on humanitarian grounds, citing that the sudden withdrawal of scholarship funding has left many international students in a state of “legal and financial limbo”.
The students requested a reprieve on visa cancellations for those affected, arguing that the default lies with a sovereign state agreement and not the individual academic performance or conduct of the scholars.
In the latest development, the Executive of the PhD Cohort-UK issued a stern directive on Friday, January 17, calling for a two-day nationwide protest.
The leadership has called on all affected students to register for the protest by contacting the president and the welfare officer to build the necessary momentum to force a response from Accra.
For many, the withdrawal from their programmes represents the death of a lifelong dream. One student, speaking on condition of anonymity, revealed, “I am in my final year of research. My university has blocked my library access and my portal. If the fees aren’t paid by the end of this month, my Tier 4 visa will be curtailed, and I will be deported with nothing but debt.”
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Source: www.myjoyonline.com


