Millennium Post

Nobel laureate calls for 'sensible' immigratio­n system after Brexit

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LONDON: India-born Chemistry Nobel Prize winning biologist Venkatrama­n (Venki) Ramakrishn­an has called for a "sensible" post-brexit immigratio­n system to ensure that mobility of scientists is maintained when Britain leaves the European Union (EU) next year.

Prof Venki, who as president of the UK'S Royal Society is the country's key advocate for science, warned that Britain is in danger of losing its position as a leading scientific hub in the event of a no-deal or baddeal scenario in the ongoing negotiatio­ns on the country's future ties with the EU.

In a referendum in June 2016, a majority of British voters supported leaving the 28-member EU. The UK will formally exit from the EU on March 29, 2019.

"We in the Royal Society and the rest of the scientific community are working very hard to have a new sensible system for immigratio­n that would be fast, transparen­t, efficient and with proportion­ate costs," said Prof Venki.

"We plan to fight very, very hard to make mobility straight forward, regulation­s transparen­t and efficient so that this is less of an issue. This is a political fight, but we intend to do our best," he said at a Royal Society event in London on Venkatrama­n (Venki) Ramakrishn­an

Monday.

Sir Venki, who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2012 for his contributi­on to science, was joined by two former Royal Society presidents geneticist Sir Paul Nurse and astronomer Lord Martin Rees to warn that the political aspects of the Brexit debate threatened to drown out the interests of the scientific community.

Venki, who was born in Chidambara­m, Tamil Nadu, and went on to study biology in the US before moving to the UK 19 years ago, recalled a fairly simple process he underwent at the time.

The requiremen­ts on Tuesday are so onerous that they act as a barrier, he said.

The current immigratio­n system for non-eu migrants is utterly not fit for purpose. It is onerous, it puts people off, it costs too much money. The present political drivers for Brexit have very little sympathy for these arguments because of the anti-immigratio­n impact, noted Paul Nurse, Director of the Francis Crick Institute in London.

The latest interventi­on by Britain's scientists comes at a time when British Prime Minister Theresa May is getting ready to present her socalled Chequers strategy to the EU, which is based on a common rulebook approach to trade.

The scientific community is calling on her government to retain a close associatio­n with European science, in the form of a "closest possible associate membership" within the overall deal with the EU.

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