Foreign students working illegally to be expelled from Britain
February 10th, 2010 - 7:50 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )By Dipankar De Sarkar
London, Feb 10 (IANS) Foreign students from outside Europe will be deported from Britain if they are found to be working illegally, the British government said Wednesday.
The British home ministry issued the warning while giving out details of new rules for foreign students, effective immediately, that it said are aimed at stopping ‘bogus students’ from coming into the country.
The new regulations will ensure that students studying below degree level have a limited ability to work in Britain and that their dependants cannot work here at all.
“It will be even harder for bogus students, whose only aim is to work in the UK, to come into the country,” the home ministry said.
The new measures include:
* A good standard of English (equivalent of holding just below a GCSE qualification - year 11 in school - in a foreign language) will be needed to come to Britain and study to improve English language competency further;
* A good standard of English (again equivalent of holding just below a GCSE in a foreign language) will need to be demonstrated in order to study any other course below degree level;
* Restricting the lowest level courses (A-levels, or year 13 in school, and equivalent) to only the most trusted institutions;
* Halving the amount of time a student studying below first degree level or on a foundation degree course, will be able to work, to just 10 hours during term time;
* A ban on bringing in dependants for anyone studying a course for less than six months; and
* A ban on dependants of anyone studying a course lower than foundation or undergraduate degree level from working - they will face removal from Britain if found doing so.
Home Secretary Alan Johnson said: “We want foreign students to come here to study, not to work illegally, and today we have set out necessary steps which will maintain the robustness of the system we introduced last year. I make no apologies for that.”
India ranks second only to China in the list of countries with the most number of students in British institutions.
Alongside, the government also announced that from 2011 it will put in place a new points-based test for people applying to become permanent residents.
From 2011, anyone wishing to become a permanent resident will have to show they have the qualifications or skills that the British economy needs, or are living in parts of the country where there are specific skills shortages that they can fill. They will also have to demonstrate that they could speak good English for their application to be successful.
- Foreign students to face stricter English language test in Britain - Feb 07, 2010
- English language tests for foreign students 'unfair', says Cambridge - Feb 11, 2010
- UK MPs warn government over new student visa controls - Mar 18, 2011
- UK immigration cap: Indian, foreign students may be barred from studying in private colleges - Nov 23, 2010
- Proposed UK visa restrictions would be 'hostile act against Britain's universities': Report - Feb 18, 2011
- New visa regulations could force at least 20,000 Chinese students out of UK - Dec 15, 2010
- UK to crack down on suspect migrant student visa rise - Aug 02, 2010
- UK to slash foreign student visas by 100,000 annually - Mar 22, 2011
- Excellent English skills made mandatory for foreign students seeking residency in Oz - Nov 12, 2010
- Scrap English criteria in non-EU student visas: British MPs - Jun 08, 2010
- 350,000 foreigners enter Britain on 'student' visas - Aug 02, 2010
- Britain partially lifts visa restrictions on north Indians - Feb 13, 2010
- British visa rules to affect 20,000 Chinese - Dec 15, 2010
- Australia to end IELTS monopoly for student visas - Oct 17, 2011
- English test must for non-EU migrants who settle in Britain - Jul 27, 2010
Tags: alan johnson, british government, degree course, degree level, dependants, dipankar, english equivalent, first degree, foreign students, foundation degree, home ministry, home secretary, language competency, london feb, necessary steps, robustness, sarkar, term time, undergraduate degree, year 11