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   Web Issue 3139 May 12 2008   
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Loophole of visas via bogus colleges will be closed
CALUM MacDONALDJuly 25 2007

An immigration loophole that enables people to come to the UK to work illegally while claiming to be students is to be closed, government ministers have announced.

Yesterday's move follows concern that hundreds of small schools have been acting as a front for people to enter the UK to work illegally.

The Home Office is to tighten the registration regime governing private colleges which recruit students from overseas in an attempt to weed out the bogus institutions operating simply as "visa shops".

Earlier this month, an investigation into the unregulated and burgeoning private college industry in Scotland by The Herald found a number of colleges based in Glasgow were advertising non-existent courses or were using logos of recognised educational and industry bodies on their websites without permission. Despite this, all the colleges were on a government list which allows visas to be issued to students who have secured a place at them.

Two of the colleges set up websites which described lavish facilities and highly specialised courses, despite being based in a rundown office block and in a private apartment up a close.

In the wake of the revelations, the Home Office's Border and Immigration Agency launched an investigation into whether the colleges were set up purely to bring immigrants into the UK under student visas, rather than to educate them.

The investigation is ongoing, but the Home Office and the newly formed Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills in Westminster were able to outline the new regime yesterday.

From 2009, all private colleges recruiting students from overseas will be required to register with the Home Office and prove they are genuine.

Bill Rammell, Higher Education Minister, said: "Unaccredited institutions should seek accreditation as soon as possible. These improvements will mean we are better equipped to protect the UK against those individuals and colleges who want to misuse the student route of entry."

Liam Byrne, Immigration Minister, said: "Abuse of our education system will not be tolerated. Foreign students bring in a huge £5bn a year, but migration has to support Britain's national interests."

The Association of Scotland's Colleges (ASC) has been pressing ministers to tighten up the rules to prevent abuse by bogus colleges. Sue Pinder, convener of the ASC's Principal's Forum, said: "The ASC welcomes the UK government's announcement. We have been calling for such a measure for some time."


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Posted by: John on 1:25am Wed 25 Jul 07
This is certainly good news, and it is news that comes close on the heels of some quality investigative journalism on the part of the Herald. Only a minority of privately run colleges are bogus, and this tightening up of the rules will help protect the great number of genuine colleges which are becoming increasingly important to our economy.

I hope that the costs of this initiative do not weigh too heavily on the smaller genuine colleges concerned.
Posted by: Sceptic on 7:51am Wed 25 Jul 07
How does John know that ". Only a minority of privately run colleges are bogus, " How?Exactly how?
Posted by: Roderic Kyle, Lochcarron on 7:52am Wed 25 Jul 07
How was it possible to gain a Student visa from the places?? I sponsor my partner for her studies and could only obtain visas for her by booking her with 'Accredited' institutions. The Embassy in Baku even knocked 1 visa application- incorrectly as it turned out, causing us lots of extra costs and grief!! I am a resident of Scotland, hold a British passport and had to show financial sufficiency- without these facts- no chance!!
Posted by: Scotty on 11:18am Wed 25 Jul 07
Possible because the bogus colleges ARE on the list, and therefore the incoming students were not breaking the law. It's the dopey government which wasn't properly checking whether they're real colleges or not. Outstandingly useless bureaucracy - it's high time they got their fingers out, but I wouldn't be publicising their incompetence to date if I were them....
Posted by: The Middle Eye, On the Microscope on 7:23pm Wed 25 Jul 07
It was/is all a major scam with certain people in the authorities in cahoots is/was it not?
Posted by: neil robertson, dundee on 10:05pm Wed 25 Jul 07
Scotty makes an excellent point - these colleges were on the British government list of accredited institutions ............. that was the whole
point of The Herald story I thought! This announcement that DIUSS has now trotted out has been in the pipeline for months and is not in my view an adequate response to the calls for accreditation to be a matter for the Scottish Executive to deal with in Scotland. The body that is being proposed to do these Home Office accreditations is a subsidiary of the completely unaccountable (and venally corrupt !)British Council which has recently been busted for tax evasion in Russia and whose treatment of its own language teachers is an international scandal. Yet the recently dysfunctional Home Office
and this new UK ministerial acronym 'DIUSS' are it seems now proposing that these 'monkeys' be given a further monopoly of 'accreditation' of institutions operating in this area? There are
two other accreditation bodies mentioned on the DIUSS press release but British Council seems to be on the board of one of these as well. Is the third one independent? And why no Scottish bodies?

I still think local authority education officials should take on this task.
Certainly I would not buy a used car from The British Council .........!
http://www.dius.gov.
uk/pressreleases/pre
ss-release-20070724.
htm

And for the history of this proposal (which predated The Herald's exposée): http://dblackie.blog
s.com/the_language_b
usiness/2006/04/comp
ulsoty_efl_.html#com
ments

I would also prioritise closing down abuse of the 'ac' internet site protocol that has caused confusion. The Ascension Islands are a dependency of St Helena which is British. Des Browne may not be Napoleon but surely he has some sway with Cable and Wireless who administer the 'ac' register on the AC's 'Wideawake' air-base?
Posted by: David Blackie, Norfolk, England on 9:36am Thu 26 Jul 07
There is still considerable lack of clarity in these arrangements. Most markets for the language schools are not visa countries. None of this hoo-ha will make therefore the slightest difference to operations with students coming from France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Poland, Japan etc, and by choosing not to engage with the bureaucratic nightmare that is now being established with points systems and sponsors and using schools as visa managers, and not therefore recruiting students from visa countries, plenty of schools will do very well without a specific accreditation they neither want nor need. Moreover by being able to undercut those who are stuck with higher recruiting costs and general overheads, they may well undermine accredited private schools as those students who are free to do what they like move from them to lower cost schools. Illegal immigration is illegal immigration and must be policed. But the control of potential illegal immigration by language schools is a very different matter, and imagining that mandatory British Council accreditation has any bearing on either the health of language schools or the interests of overseas students or illegal immigration is foolish.
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