海角大神

Scholarships brought African students to Iran. Bombs sent them home.

|
Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto/AP/File
A group of young Iranians stands together outside the University of Tehran, Feb. 4, 2025.

Muffled wails seeped through the thin dormitory walls of the dorm at Bint-ul-Huda University in Qom, Iran, early on the morning of March 1, jolting Janet Pauros awake.

With sleep still clinging to her eyes, the Zimbabwean student of Islamic studies rushed down the stairs, where she found her classmates huddled around the TV. A breaking news banner flashed across the screen: Iran鈥檚 supreme leader Ali Khamenei was dead.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I knew it was going to be a big war,鈥 Ms. Pauros says.

Why We Wrote This

For years, Iran鈥檚 government has doled out scholarships to African students to help build political goodwill on the continent. Now, those students find themselves in the crosshairs of a mushrooming conflict.

As U.S. and Israeli missiles fall on Iran, students from Africa have found themselves in the crosshairs of an escalating conflict. They come from across the continent 鈥 from Nigeria to Uganda to Zimbabwe 鈥 many on scholarships from the Iranian government. Precise figures are hard to come by, but about 1,000 students from Nigeria alone were studying in Iran this academic year, according to the Nigerian Embassy there.

For Tehran, sponsoring these students鈥 education is a way to build goodwill and deepen its political influence in Africa. For the students themselves, meanwhile, studying in Iran was supposed to be a ticket to a funded international education.

But now, they were just trying to make it out alive.

An abrupt ending

In the days that followed the supreme leader鈥檚 death, grief seemed to hang over Qom, thick as the air pollution, Ms. Pauros says. A hospital near her school was bombed. 鈥淚 thought I would die,鈥 she recalls.

Iran had not been part of Ms. Pauros鈥 plan. But a family emergency drained the funds for her university tuition back home. When her friend who was already in Iran told her about scholarship opportunities in the country, it felt like a lifeline.

Courtesy of Janet Pauros
Zimbabwean student Janet Pauros stands in front of the holy shrine and mausoleum of Fatima bint Musa in Qom, Iran, in January 2026.

Zimbabwe鈥檚 ties to Iran run deep. 鈥淲hen we went to war [for independence], Iran was our friend,鈥 explained Zimbabwean president Emmerson Mnangagwa as he welcomed his Iranian counterpart, Ebrahim Raisi, to Harare in July 2023. 鈥淲hen you see him, you see me. When you see me, you see him.鈥

The two countries also share another common experience. 鈥淚t is critically important that we, the victims of Western sanctions 鈥 show them that we鈥檙e united,鈥 Mr. Mnangagwa explained.

But that warm diplomacy couldn鈥檛 insulate Ms. Pauros from the prickly reception she received in April of last year when she arrived in Qom, an ancient city that is considered holy by Shiite Muslims.

Though she learned Farsi, it quickly became clear to her that she would never be accepted. 鈥淭he people are incredibly racist,鈥 she says bluntly, sadness falling over her brown eyes as she remembers how African students were passed over in class 鈥 their hands raised, ignored.

Leaving the campus to go out and explore was also difficult. She says the school even kept students鈥 passports, saying they needed them in order to renew their study permits.

A bright spot had been befriending a student from Burkina Faso, named Majdida. But when Ms. Pauros decided to leave Iran last week, Majdida stayed behind. Her embassy hadn鈥檛 organized a visa.

鈥淚 was so scared because she couldn鈥檛 evacuate,鈥 Ms. Pauros says, recalling how the two women cried as they said goodbye.

Dragging a suitcase filled with everything she owned, Ms. Pauros got a taxi to Tehran鈥檚 bus station, which was teeming with people and barely-contained panic.

She boarded a bus to the border with Armenia, arriving late at night. A visa organized by the Zimbabwean government was waiting. 鈥淚 was relieved,鈥 she says, but her anxiety didn鈥檛 fully dissolve until six hours later, when she arrived in the Armenian capital Yerevan, just in time to see the sun come up.

鈥淎 very nice country鈥

For the last five years, Alhassan Lamrana Jalloh鈥檚 medical studies at the University of Tehran have been his whole world. Unlike Ms. Pauros, the student from Sierra Leone says Iran has been good to him.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very nice country,鈥 says Mr. Jalloh, who is studying on an Iranian government scholarship. 鈥淧eaceful. The people, accommodating.鈥

Courtesy of Alhassan Lamrana Jalloh
Alhassan Lamrana Jalloh, a student from Sierra Leone, participates in a class at Tehran University of Medical Sciences in 2022.

Mr. Jalloh says studying in Iran gave him access to an education better than what he could get back home. And outside the classroom, he was happy, meeting up with friends in caf茅s and restaurants, and exploring nearby cities on his holidays.

But that calm student life was shaken last June, during the 12-day war between Israel and Iran. A blast tore through his dormitory, injuring a number of students.

Rattled, Mr. Jalloh moved into the Sierra Leonean Embassy. It was there he sheltered when missile strikes began again in recent days, waiting in shock as internet cuts kept him from reaching his mother to let her know he was safe.

Five days into the war, the embassy chartered a bus to take Mr. Jalloh and 13 other Sierra Leonean students 鈥 all of them studying on Iranian government scholarships 鈥 to the Armenian border.

But the journey hit a snag when the students reached the frontier and were told their Armenian visas weren鈥檛 ready. Stranded in the cold, between two countries, they settled in for a night of waiting.

A narrow escape

At the same time, Zimbabweans Cecil Magura, Ishmael Chikuwa, and Nathaniel Muringani were also trying to escape.

The three friends had been living in the northern city of Qazvin, where they studied Farsi at a language center.

When the bombing started, they, too, began searching for a way to get to the Armenian border.

Faced with extortionate prices from taxi drivers, the friends were forced to split up, and as the car Mr. Magura was riding in wound through mountains blanketed in ice and snow, it got stuck.

He got out and pushed; shoulders down, feet sliding, and harsh bitter wind cutting through his thinning resolve. All around him, people were doing the same, pushing cars with luggage piled high on their roofs over the slick roads.

The three friends eventually managed to bundle into the same car, and reached the border at 6 a.m. There, they found Mr. Jalloh and the other Sierra Leonean students still waiting.

When staff from the Sierra Leonean Embassy saw the Zimbabweans, they immediately offered to pay for their visas, and to get them to their final destination in Armenia. The two groups from opposite ends of the African continent left Iran together.

鈥淭hey just accepted us as their own,鈥 Mr Muringani says.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.

 
QR Code to Scholarships brought African students to Iran. Bombs sent them home.
Read this article in
/World/Africa/2026/0311/african-students-scholarships-iran-war
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe