Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
International

OFFENSIVE: London Mayor Slams UK Visa Policy For Indian Students

IANS, 25 Jun, 2018 12:18 PM
    London Mayor Sadiq Khan has said he will continue to lobby the UK government to change its rules around immigration as he branded the exclusion of Indians from an easier student visa application regime as "offensive" and a "wasted opportunity".
     
     
    Dismissing UK government claims over visa overstayers from India, Khan said the evidence did not back up the concerns.
     
     
    "To link the two, illegal immigration and students is deeply offensive and also muddies the waters. This hostile environment (to immigration) is still here and we need real concrete evidence that it will change," Khan said on the sidelines of the UK-India Awards here last evening.
     
     
    "There isn't a problem about students overstaying... All the evidence shows that Indians who study here leave with a very positive attitude. So, when they become chief executives or investors, they invest in the UK," he said.
     
     
    The senior Labour party leader challenged the Theresa May-led Conservative party government's "blind spot", which fails to take into account the benefits of immigration to Britain.
     
     
     
    "I feel this government is being very complacent about Indian investment. They assume it will always be here. My message to the government is no; these talented people can go elsewhere," he warned.
     
     
    Mr Khan said he would continue to lobby the government to change rules, not just for tourists and students but also for Bollywood because film producers are now going to other parts of Europe as filming in London becomes far more difficult because of visa restrictions and the high cost of visitor visas.
     
     
    He added, "As we leave the European Union (EU), we need to use this opportunity to build better links with countries outside the EU. We must realise Indians are equal partners, we mustn't talk down to them. It's a competition to attract talented Indians and we have got to be competing".
     
     
    His intervention came as the UK government seemed to indicate a softening of its stance over the issue of visas. UK Foreign Office Minister Mark Field told the audience of senior business and political leaders at the UK-India Awards that the government was determined to make the changes necessary and it was just a matter of time before these become visible.
     
     
    "I think all of us realise that there has to be a change in the visa system. I will just say that these things do take a little bit of time and I think we are making some progress in that area," said Field, who is also the minister of state in charge of India in the Foreign Office.
     
     
     
    His comments come in the wake of brewing India-UK tensions since last week when the UK Home Office unveiled new reforms to its Tier 4 student visa system, adding countries like China, Serbia and the Maldives to an expanded list from where overseas students could access a more streamlined university application process.
     
     
    But India was conspicuous by its absence on that list, leading to an outcry among student groups and other senior leaders.
     
     
    The British High Commission in New Delhi has insisted the move would mean no change to the experience of Indian students applying to UK universities, but critics have questioned the perception it creates at a time when Indian students are already being put off applying to the UK and choosing alternate destinations.
     
     
    "The reality is there is so much talent in India, there is so much potential. Why aren't we rushing to try and get that talent to come here rather than letting them go to Canada, Australia, the US and New Zealand?" questioned Mr Khan.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Historic India Club In London Fights For Survival

    Historic India Club In London Fights For Survival
    The India Club in London, a hub for Indian nationalists in the UK during the independence movement in the 1930s and 40s, is fighting for its survival after plans emerged for the building to be demolished internally.

    Historic India Club In London Fights For Survival

    Short-Range Nuclear Weapons To Counter India's 'Cold Start Doctrine': Pakistan PM

    Short-Range Nuclear Weapons To Counter India's 'Cold Start Doctrine': Pakistan PM
    Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said on Thursday his country has developed short-range nuclear weapons to counter the 'cold start doctrine' adopted by the Indian Army.

    Short-Range Nuclear Weapons To Counter India's 'Cold Start Doctrine': Pakistan PM

    'Sikhs Ethnically Different From Indians': 100 UK MPs Back Non-Indian Ethnic Identity Move For Sikhs

    'Sikhs Ethnically Different From Indians': 100 UK MPs Back Non-Indian Ethnic Identity Move For Sikhs
    However, Khalistan campaigners in Britain are divided over whether Sikhs are ethnically different from Indians. Lord Indarjit Singh, a member of the House of Lords looked upon as an authority on Sikh affairs, maintains they are not.

    'Sikhs Ethnically Different From Indians': 100 UK MPs Back Non-Indian Ethnic Identity Move For Sikhs

    Sikh Family In Australia Wins Case Over Son Wearing Turban To Christian School

    Sikh Family In Australia Wins Case Over Son Wearing Turban To Christian School
    A Sikh family in Australia on Tuesday won a legal battle against a Christian school which refused to enrol their five-year-old son because of his turban.

    Sikh Family In Australia Wins Case Over Son Wearing Turban To Christian School

    Rahul Gandhi To Address Public Meeting In New York

    Rahul Gandhi To Address Public Meeting In New York
    Congress party Vice President Rahul Gandhi is scheduled to address a public meeting here on Wednesday arranged by the the party's overseas wing as part of its push to enlist Non-resident Indians (NRIs).

    Rahul Gandhi To Address Public Meeting In New York

    Egyptian Preacher Says Men Can Have Sex With Dead Wives ... Gets Banned From TV

    Egyptian Preacher Says Men Can Have Sex With Dead Wives ... Gets Banned From TV
    Controversial cleric Sabri Abdel Raouf cannot go on television or radio, Egypt's top media watchdog ruled on Tuesday, after he said that Muslims could have sex with their wives' corpses, Al-Arabiya Arabic news channel reported on Tuesday.

    Egyptian Preacher Says Men Can Have Sex With Dead Wives ... Gets Banned From TV