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London, July 25 : A total of about 63,000 fake
students entered Britain in 2011, and 59 percent of the total number of
Indian pupils were bogus, a report by a British campaign group said
Wednesday.
The study by Migration Watch UK, based on the findings
of a Home Office pilot scheme, said the highest percentage of bogus
students came from Myanmar at 62 percent.
It was followed by India, Bangladesh and Nigeria with 59 percent, a press statement said.
Under
the pilot scheme, applicants for student visas were interviewed to
determine whether they were genuine. This involved two tests - whether
they were genuine as students and whether they intended to return home
after their studies.
Of the total 63,000 students who could be
potentially refused visa on credibility grounds, 61 percent were
applying for privately funded colleges, 17 percent for a publicly funded
college and 14 percent for a university.
The Home Office now plans to interview 10,000 students a year.
Andrew
Green, chairman of Migration Watch, said: "We now have clear evidence
of abuse on a major scale. Bogus students come here to work illegally
and thus take jobs from British workers."
"If it is clear from
the circumstances that a student is unlikely to go home, the visa should
not be granted in the first place. After all, many of the advantages
claimed for foreign students depend on their going home after their
studies," he said.
Referring to a letter to the Sunday Times
daily, signed by 37 business leaders, calling for students to be taken
out of net migration, Green said that it was impossible because, unlike
the US and Australia, Britain has no exit checks.
"So nobody knows how many who came as students have actually left Britain."
© IANS
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