Sixty universities and private colleges have been banned
from sponsoring any new international students to enrol and study following an
unprecedented crackdown by the home office.
The news was broken by immigration
minister James Brokenshire during a statement to the House of Commons on
Tuesday 08 July 2014. He said the highly trusted sponsor status of the educational
establishments had been suspended following a "detailed and wide-ranging
investigation into actions by organised criminals to falsify English language
tests for student visa applicants".
Brokenshire told MPs a criminal
investigation had been launched and the scale of "systematic abuse on this
government's watch.. is truly shocking".
The
announcement follows BBC's
Panorama report into
the routine cheating in government-approved exams. The investigation uncovered
a thriving market in false documents, with criminal agents helping students get
around language tests which are necessary for a visa to be obtained - even if
they speak little or no English.
Home Affairs Committee chair Keith
Vaz called for face-to-face interviewing of people abroad applying to study in
the UK, arguing: "If that was done they would never get here in the first
place."
International
students at Glyndwr previously announced they would be suing the university after being told they would no longer
qualify for visa sponsorship. They were being taught in London by LSBF.
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