Theresa May to 'kick out foreign graduates' in new
immigration plans
Course
graduates would have to return home before applying for visas
LAMIAT SABIN / Sunday 21 December 2014 / http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/foreign-students-could-be-sent-home-before-applying-for-work-visas-to-cut-immigration-9938145.html?cmpid=facebook-post
Foreign graduates could face being sent
back to their home countries under plans to “move towards zero net student
migration” reportedly being considered by Home Secretary Theresa May.
Students from non-European Union countries
would have to subsequently apply for a work visa while abroad in order to
continue living in the UK
after finishing a course of study, The Sunday Times reported, instead of being
able to apply for one while still on British soil.
A source close to the Home Secretary told
the newspaper: “Making sure immigrants leave Britain at the end of their visa is
as important a part of running a fair and efficient immigration system as
controlling who comes here in the first place.”
Mrs May is also pressing for the power to
be able to penalise colleges and universities that would have low success rates
in ensuring the departure of foreign graduates and to deprive them of their
right to sponsor overseas students, the source added.
Under current rules most students can apply
for a work visa while still living in the UK , rather than having to leave the
country to apply for one before potentially returning.
Mrs May has repeatedly clashed with Liberal
Democrat Business Secretary Vince Cable - whose department has responsibility
for universities - about foreign students as he claims that tough rules could
discourage them from choosing to study here.
A senior Lib Dem source said her plan could
deprive the UK
of highly-skilled graduates.
“Such a blunt instrument would not get our
support,” the source said.
“The idea that you have people from abroad
studying in this country and they become engineers or scientists of huge
practical value to the economy and rather than have them stay here you
immediately turf them out makes zero economic sense.”
Mrs May's plan emerged after Prime Minister
David Cameron insisted that only the Tories can offer “competence” on dealing
with immigration.
Mr Cameron and Mrs May plan to reduce net
annual migration from hundreds of thousands to tens of thousands by the next
election, however the Home Secretary stated on the Andrew Marr Show that the
target is likely to not be met.
The Prime Minister claimed that his
coalition government has addressed some of the problems inherited from the
previous Labour administration that “let immigration get out of control” and
seeks to pinpoint those living in the UK illegally before deporting them by
revoking driving licences, the ability to open a bank account and have
landlords check on the immigration status of their tenants.
Mr Cameron also stated an “absolute
requirement” to make changes to the welfare state for migrants in the hope to
cut down the numbers of people moving to the UK from within the European Union.
He said: “I came into office with a
single-minded determination to turn all this around - and real progress has
been made.
“We put a cap on those coming here to work
from outside the European Union - and we have seen the numbers fall significantly,
close to levels last seen in the 1990s. Major work has been done to clamp down
on the bogus ‘colleges’ that were really just a front for people to come here,
with more than 800 of them shut down so far.”
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