Millennium Post

UK to cut student visas by half, says report

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The UK government is finalising plans to cut annual student visa figures by nearly half, from the current 300,000 to 170,000, a media report said on Monday amid a sharp fall in students coming to the country from outside Europe including India.

Some university chiefs are also warning that many Indian students are already being denied visas on minor grounds as part of a wider move to cut immigratio­n into the UK.

"They are telling some students there is exactly the same quality of course available in India so why are you coming here. That is outrageous," a UK vice-chancellor was quoted as saying by the Guardian newspaper.

The move comes despite recent UK Office of National Statistics (ONS) figures indicating there has been a drastic drop in students coming to the UK from outside Europe.

"There was a statistica­lly significan­t decline in the number of non-eu citizens migrating to the UK to study, from 134,000 in the previous year to 111,000...there was a statistica­lly significan­t decline in citizens of South Asia, with the number coming to study having almost halved," ONS said in its 'Migration Statistics Quarterly Report: August 2016'.

India is the third-largest category in terms of student visa applicatio­ns after the US and China, with 10,664 granted between June 2015 and 2016.

"Internatio­nal students contribute, directly and indirectly, 14 billion pounds to the UK economy, making higher education one of this country's most valuable exports...over the last five years, the number of Indian students attending UK universiti­es has halved. I have consistent­ly asked the government to remove students from the net migration target," said Lord Bilimoria, leading Indian-origin entreprene­ur and Cobra Beer founder, who himself came to the UK as a student.

"We should immediatel­y reintroduc­e the two-year poststudy work visa, which I fought hard to introduce before its withdrawal in 2012, to allow foreign students to implement their much-needed skills here and help boost our economy," he added. During British Prime Minister Theresa May's visit to India last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stressed on the importance of access for Indian students to UK institutio­ns.

"Education is vital for our students and will define our engagement in a shared future. We must therefore encourage greater mobility and participat­ion of young people in educationa­l and research opportunit­ies," PM Modi had told May in his address at the UK India Tech Summit in New Delhi.

 ??  ?? During British Prime Minister Theresa May’s visit to India last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stressed on the importance of access for Indian students to UK institutio­ns
During British Prime Minister Theresa May’s visit to India last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stressed on the importance of access for Indian students to UK institutio­ns

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