Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

UK English test scandal: Indians, other foreign students renew bid to clear their names

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Feb, 2024 11:26 AM
  • UK English test scandal: Indians, other foreign students renew bid to clear their names

London, Feb 12 (IANS) A group of international students, including many Indians, who had their visas revoked almost 10 years ago after accusations of cheating in English language tests in the UK, are making renewed efforts to clear their names.

According to a report in The Guardian, fresh evidence has recently been presented in the court that questions the Home Office's cheating allegations against 35,000 international students.

The Home Office abruptly terminated the visas of these students, making their stay in the country illegal overnight, following a 2014 BBC documentary reporting allegations of cheating at two of the UK's language testing centres for international students.

About 2,500 students were deported after immigration enforcement teams mounted dawn raids on students’ accommodation, the news report said.

While some 7,200 students left the country after detention threats, thousands stayed protesting "flawed evidence" as they struggled with homelessness, huge legal fees, and stress-induced illnesses.

After judges and watchdog reports highlighted flaws in the evidence of cheating, around 3,600 won appeals against the Home Office, while the rest of them couldn't because of the prohibitive cost of taking legal action.

Abdul Qadir Mohammad, 36, who left India in 2010 to study business in London, spent more than 20,000 pounds trying to clear his name in the scandal, pushing him and his family into debt.

Abdul told The Guardian that he gets "panic attacks" and feels ashamed to face my family back home who ask him: "Abdul you have lived in the UK for 14 years. What have you achieved?"

"...my father is still angry with me. He has spent so much money first on my education and then on trying to clear my name. He had a small grocery shop and saved up to put 15,000 pounds into my college fees. I’ve got debts on my credit card of £10,000. My mother sold her gold to support me..." he said.

The Hyderabad resident said he feels angry about how the whole issue has been handled, destroying his life.

"These tests are easy to pass; I had no reason to cheat... I want to clear my name and get on with my studies. I spend my days sitting in the park, desperately waiting for my hearing,” he told The Guardian.

The students had also approached and presented a petition to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in March last year, seeking his help to clear their names.

In their petition to the Prime Minister, the students called for a simple, free mechanism to apply for a decision or reconsideration of their case.

They also wanted the immigration record of every student cleared of cheating, facilitate their return to study, or support those on work or entrepreneur visas to find new jobs or restart their businesses -- by removing barriers created by the cheating allegations.

After the BBC report, then Home Secretary Theresa May asked the US-based test provider, Educational Testing Service (ETS) to investigate, which found that 97 per cent of its English tests taken in the UK between 2011 and 2014 were in some way suspicious.

According to a 2019 report by the Public Accounts Committee, the Home Office "rushed to penalise overseas students, and did not bother to find out whether ETS was involved in fraud or if it had reliable evidence".

MORE International ARTICLES

Sikh family alleges racial discrimination at Windsor Castle, threatens legal action

Sikh family alleges racial discrimination at Windsor Castle, threatens legal action
Rapinder Kaur, 36, said she, her turban-wearing husband and their two-year-old child were subjected to racial taunts by guards during a visit to the castle last year, The Independent reported.

Sikh family alleges racial discrimination at Windsor Castle, threatens legal action

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash
Kunal Chopra was returning from work when his Hyundai Getz collided head-on with a concrete pumping truck on William Hovell Drive last week, SBS Punjabi, a multicultural and multilingual broadcaster in Australia, reported. The Australian Capital Territory Ambulance Service paramedics declared Chopra dead on the scene.

21 year old Indian student, Kunal Kapoor, from Punjab dies in Australia car crash

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash
Harinder Singh Randhawa, who is recuperating in the hospital under police custody, was driving a Peugeot with four passengers inside when it collided with a Toyota Hilux ute at an intersection at Pine Lodge, near Shepparton earlier this month, the SBS Punjabi channel reported. Randhawa will be appearing in Melbourne Magistrates' Court on June 8.

Indian-origin driver charged for killing 4 Sikh men in Australia crash

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father
More than 200 people held a candlelight vigil in McKinney, Texas, in the memory of a nine year-old Indian-origin boy who was allegedly stabbed to death by his father last week.Subramanian Ponnazhakan, 39, was booked on capital murder charge and his bail was set at $1 million, the McKinney Police said.

Vigil held for 9 year-old Indian-American boy allegedly slain by father

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study
Among the 313 respondents from the US and India, more than half said they often do cyberbullying while only 6 per cent said they had never committed cyberbullying. Educated and married people, irrespective of their gender, were most likely to commit cyberbullying more frequently, but demographics were not the only factors at play. 

9 in 10 adults from India, US admit to cyberbullying: Study

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK
Hashim Aziz was driving at over three times the speed limit to "impress his cousins" when his Audi A3 crashed into Baljinder Kaur Moore's Vauxhall Corsa in West Midlands, in November last year, the Mirror reported. Baljinder, 32, was on her way to pick up her husband from his brother's home, and she was driving at 62 mph.

Reckless driver jailed for killing Sikh woman in UK