If you want to study somewhere other than India, you still have a few options.
- You could look towards Europe (minus the UK). Many public universities there are free or almost free to attend, even for international students. Some teach Bachelor's degrees entirely in English (e.g. the [Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences](https://www.hochschule-rhein-waal.de/en/faculties/technology-and-bionics/degree-programmes/electronics-bsc-electrical-engineering-bsc)). A handful even have degree programs targeted specifically at international students who may wish to immigrate, where the degree program starts out in English and then transitions to the local language over time (e.g. the [University of Applied Sciences in Dresden](https://www.htw-dresden.de/?id=34263.html)).
European universities also tend to have rather late application deadlines. You can still apply now to start this fall, if you were interested.
- You could take a gap year, improve your ACT score, and then apply to American universities with automatic full-tuition scholarships, like those offered by the [University of Alabama at Huntsville](https://www.uah.edu/admissions/undergraduate/financial-aid/scholarships/merit-tuition-scholarships) for an ACT score of 34, or the [University of Mississippi](https://finaid.olemiss.edu/scholarships/#8) for an ACT score of 33.
If you are somewhat flexible about your major, there are a bunch more financial aid opportunities at colleges with a computer science program but no degree in electrical engineering, such as liberal arts colleges with need-based aid for international students.