The Department of Homeland Security has revoked student visas at CUNY and Fordham University, officials from those schools said Wednesday.

CUNY said Wednesday that 17 international students had “a change in visa status.”

In a statement, a CUNY spokesperson said they are offering those students guidance and assistance.

“CUNY is committed to supporting all members of our community and will continue to provide a range of supports to our immigrant students, employees and other New Yorkers through campus resources like CUNY Citizenship Now!, the nation’s oldest, largest university-based legal assistance program,” the statement read.

Some students told NY1 spoke they worry the White House is attacking free speech on campus.

“Everyone is entitled to [their] own opinion. Everyone has own beliefs, shouldn’t be targeted for speaking up about what you think is right, what you believe in. It doesn’t matter if you're a foreign student," Larien Samaan, a City College student, said.

“Everyone should be allowed to express own views, regardless immigrant or not," Morgane Kapto, a City College student, said.

Meanwhile, Fordham University said the Department of Homeland Security has revoked the visas of two of its students.

According to a letter sent to the university by Fordham President Tania Tetlow, “a growing number of students from a wide range of countries have had their visas revoked without explanation and without notice.”

“We discovered that this has affected one of our own undergraduate students,” the letter goes on to read.

The first student’s visa was revoked last Friday, according to Tetlow’s initial message. Tetlow then updated the message on Tuesday to confirm that a second student had their visa revoked.

The university said it does not believe the students are connected to protests at the school.

The Department of Homeland Security has also not provided the school with a reason for the action, Tetlow said in an update to her initial message on Sunday.

In addition, the president and provost of New York University wrote in a post on the university’s website that “some members of our community are among those affected” by the federal government’s terminations of immigration status of students across the country.

It’s unclear how many students, if those students took part in pro-Palestinian demonstrations on campus and what criminal charges, if any, they face.

According to NYU, it hosts more international students than any other American university, with around 28,000 students.

Mayor Eric Adams also weighed in Wednesday on foreign students being targeted across the city, saying the federal government is in charge of immigration not the city.

NY1 has reached out to the Department of Homeland Security for information.