Australia to cancel 20,000 visa applications
February 8th, 2010 - 11:00 am ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Melbourne, Feb 8 (IANS) In an overhaul of the immigration policy, Australia will cancel 20,000 visa applications from foreign nationals, including Indians, who have been staying in the country under the existing skilled migration programme.
The changes which will be unveiled Monday will see 20,000 current applications binned as a result of an overhaul of the list that identifies occupations in demand and awards points on the basis of professional qualifications of the applicants.
State governments will be asked to develop new migration plans and a new list will be prepared to define occupations in demand in the country. The government will also set a maximum number of visas for a single occupation.
The new system will favour skilled workers such as nurses, medical practitioners, engineers and teachers instead of groups such as cooks and hairdressers.
The cancelled applications apply to all offshore general skilled migration claims lodged before September 2007. Refunding 20,000 visa applications will cost taxpayers about $14 million, The Age reported.
The government, however, will make transitional arrangements for such applicants until 2012.
Foreign students who have a qualification for an occupation no longer considered in demand will get to apply for a temporary 18-month visa, allowing them to gain work experience.
If foreign graduates fail to find an employer willing to sponsor their applications, they will have to return to their country of origin.
According to Immigration Minister Chris Evans, the existing program “has been delivering self-nominated migrants from a narrow range of occupations with poor to moderate English language skills who struggle to find employment in their nominated occupation”.
Evans also acknowledged the unscrupulous migration agents in the country.
“These (agents) have been misleading many international students into believing that a course in Australia will give them an automatic entitlement to permanent residence,” Evans was quoted as saying. “It does not, and it will not”.
The minister, however, said that “The government supports skilled migration and continues to want migrants, “Be they from India, the United Kingdom or China - our three largest source countries or elsewhere”.
“We want skilled migrants on terms that work both for Australia and for the migrants themselves. We need a program with integrity and direction,” Evans said.
hv/sam
- Oz Govt. to favour doctors, nurses and teachers who speak good English - Feb 08, 2010
- Australia shuts the door on cooks, hairdressers - May 17, 2010
- Australia, Canada change immigration rules - Jun 28, 2010
- Australia to end IELTS monopoly for student visas - Oct 17, 2011
- Australia eases norms to woo highly-skilled immigrants - Jun 17, 2011
- UK's new proposals to protect Brit workers may hit skilled Indian migrants - Feb 08, 2011
- Australia announces changed Skilled Migration program - Jul 01, 2010
- UK decision to cap non-EU immigrants may hit Indian students - Sep 06, 2010
- Australia revamps skilled migration test - Nov 11, 2010
- Excellent English skills made mandatory for foreign students seeking residency in Oz - Nov 12, 2010
- Entry requirements changed for students wanting to study in Australia - Dec 20, 2010
- Oz body calls for student visa regime reform - Mar 14, 2011
- Australian govt. to freeze recruitment of migrant workers to protect local jobs - Mar 16, 2009
- Australian Immigration Minister cautions against migration scams - Oct 08, 2010
- Britain talks tough on abuse of visa rules - Aug 24, 2010
Tags: chris evans, country of origin, english language skills, foreign nationals, foreign students, general skilled migration, immigration minister, immigration policy, international students, maximum number, medical practitioners, migrants, migration agents, migration plans, occupations in demand, professional qualifications, skilled workers, state governments, transitional arrangements, visa applications