Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Police clearance a must for Indian doctors, teachers seeking UK jobs

- Prasun Sonwalkar n letters@hindustant­imes.com

: LONDON Indian doctors, nurses and those taking up jobs in Britain’s education sector will have to provide a police clearance certificat­e as part of their visa applicatio­ns from April, and failure to do so will result in visa refusal, official sources said on Friday.

The new requiremen­t affects non-EU citizens applying for entry clearance under the Tier 2 General route to work in the education, health and social care sectors. It will also apply to partners of applicants and a partner applying to join an existing Tier 2 migrant in one of these sectors.

So far, Indian and other non-EU migrants self-declare that they do not have criminal records. The new requiremen­t will make it mandatory to provide a “criminal record certificat­e” from any country in which they have lived for 12 months or more in the previous 10 years.

Exceptions to the new rule are applicants under 18, and if providing the certificat­e is not “reasonably practicabl­e” because the particular country does not produce certificat­es or because the individual has successful­ly sought asylum from that nation.

Several trusts in the National Health Service and many UK universiti­es recruit Indian citizens for various roles.

The new measure is part of steps being introduced to curb immigratio­n, including introducin­g higher salary thresholds for recruiting non-EU citizens.

Immigratio­n minister Robert Goodwill said: “Our priority is keeping families, communitie­s and our country safe. Foreign criminals have absolutely no right to be working with society’s most vulnerable.

“While we already reserve the right to refuse a visa to anyone who is convicted of a criminal offence, the introducti­on of overseas criminal record checks for those looking to work with children and vulnerable adults add anextrasaf­eguard.” “Underthe immigratio­n rules, we have the right to automatica­lly refuse entry clearance for applicants with a four-year or more custodial sentence...,” an official said.

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