When he got to Kuala Lumpur, Gurung found out that he was one among thousands of youngsters duped by the academy. Currently, students from India, Iran, and Bangladesh are toiling 12 to 16 hours a day, five days a week, in hotel kitchens in the capital for half the promised amount.
Gurung is now living in a hotel in Setapak with other Nepalis who share a similar fate. Their student visas have expired, passports seized by the college, and with no jobs in sight, they are quickly running out of money for food. One of the housemates filed a case against Lence Academy, claiming they were not given work or salaries as guaranteed.
Investigations carried out by the court have revealed that Lence Academy is actually Green City College, whose registration had been cancelled by the Malaysian government four months ago because it did not have an education licence. In the last two years, 300 Nepalis applied to GCC for courses in hospitality in cruise management.

“Eleven of us came here and found out we were cheated,” says Kamal Rai of Dharan. “We told our agents not to send more students because they would be stranded. But they sent nine more within a month, promising them ‘western lifestyles and education’, as they did to us.”
According to Gyani Raj Upreti of Rautahat, the college forced him and his friends to work long hours on their internship and withheld half their pay while making them attend classes during the weekend. After the students began protesting, a team led by the Educational Consultancies Association of Nepal (ECAN) visited Malaysia to hold talks with the college. However, many members of the delegation were the same people who sent the students to Kuala Lumpur in the first place.

But Nepal’s ambassador to Malaysia, Niranjan Man Singh Basnet, says representatives back in Nepal were well aware of what Lence Academy was doing. “We want to see if the college will provide internships and jobs at five-star hotels as promised. And if not, we are trying to get a full refund for our students,” says Basnet.
“I found out that Green City was being run illegally and I told my agent about this. But he told me LA was a different school and everything would be fine,” says Muskan Gaha Magar of Surkhet. When he reached Kuala Lumpur, Magar found out he didn’t even have a proper bed. He is now in police custody because his visa expired and he knows he will never get that cruise job he was promised.
When Nepali Times contacted Ishwar Sapkota of Baneswor's Oxon Institute and Consultancy, which sent the most Nepalis to GCC/LA, he claimed that the newer students were not faring that bad and were only a little home-sick. But the 20 Nepalis who went to Kuala Lumpur with Sapkota’s help in the last four months have nowhere to turn to after they found out what kind of college they were tricked into.
Ambassador Basnet says many of the 200 who came to Malaysia in the past two years have already returned and the embassy is currently handling the cases of 35 students. “I will send letters to Malaysia’s Ministry of Education if the problem is not solved soon,” he says. But none of the students have received any indication that they will get a refund.
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