
In a time when U.S. student visas for Africans face unprecedented scrutiny, Bob Mwiti and the International Scholars Program (ISP) have achieved a historic milestone—successfully securing 115 U.S. student visas for the Spring 2026 intake.
This remarkable achievement has sent waves of celebration across the African diaspora, positioning Bob Mwiti as one of the most impactful diaspora education champions in recent years.
A Rare Breakthrough in a Tight Visa Climate
Across many African countries, U.S. visa approvals have dropped sharply due to heightened vetting, new security requirements, and stricter financial scrutiny. Against this backdrop, ISP’s success is nothing short of extraordinary.
According to Mwiti’s official statement, ISP not only secured the visas but also financially supported students’ relocation to the United States, ensuring that approved scholars could actually begin their academic journeys.
“Despite a challenging and highly scrutinized U.S. visa environment across many African countries, the International Scholars Program successfully secured 115 visas and supported students’ relocation to the U.S. during the Spring 2026 intake.” — Bob Mwiti
This makes ISP one of the most successful diaspora-led student mobility initiatives of the year.
Approved Visas by University (Spring 2026)
The 115 students were placed across leading U.S. universities, including:
- University of South Dakota — 26
- Grand Valley State University — 18
- University of Delaware — 17
- University of Louisville — 10
- Saint Louis University — 9
- Virginia Commonwealth University — 8
- Quinnipiac University — 6
- University of Alabama at Birmingham — 5
- Lewis University — 5
- Wilkes University — 3
- University of Kentucky — 3
- Missouri State University — 2
- Temple University — 1
- William Jessup University — 1
- Wright State University — 1
These placements span diverse academic disciplines—from healthcare and IT to engineering, business, and social sciences.
Why This Matters for Africa and the Diaspora
This success proves that diaspora-driven education pipelines still work—even in the most restrictive immigration environments.
For many African families, access to U.S. education is no longer just a dream but a pathway to:
- Global career mobility
- Family economic uplift
- Knowledge transfer back to Africa
- Long-term diaspora empowerment
Bob Mwiti’s leadership has shown that community-backed, transparent, and structured programs can still break barriers.
A Legacy of Impact
What makes this achievement stand out is not just the number—115 approvals—but the fact that no major diaspora-led education initiative has matched this scale in recent years.
Mwiti and ISP are now being recognized across diaspora circles as:
- A trusted student placement bridge
- A credible visa preparation partner
- A life-changing opportunity platform for African youth
This is not just success—it is legacy in the making.
Final Word
At a time when doors seem to be closing, Bob Mwiti and the International Scholars Program have forced them open for 115 deserving students.
This is more than an education story—it is a true diaspora victory. Congratulations to Bob Mwiti and ISP on this remarkable achievement!








