UNIVERSITIES UNDER PRESSURE

The tightening follows growing concerns that student visas are increasingly being used as a backdoor into the UK.

Government estimates show that around 16,000 people who entered Britain on student visas in 2024 later applied for asylum.

More than 80 per cent of asylum seekers from Pakistan and Bangladesh are believed to have arrived on valid visas to work or study initially.

The issue has become politically sensitive in Britain, prompting the Home Office to act.

Samah Rafiq, who co-lead the borders and migration research group at King’s College London, said: “There are limited ways for a genuine asylum seeker to get to the UK, and these safe and legal routes that asylum seekers had access to have systematically been decreased and diminished further through policy actions in the UK as well as in the wider EU.”

Last year, half of all rejected UK student visa applications came from just those two countries.

A Home Office spokesperson told CNA that the government strongly values the contribution of international students, but said tougher measures are necessary.

“That’s why we’re tightening the rules to ensure those coming here are genuine students and education providers take their responsibilities seriously,” said the spokesperson.

Institutions that fail to meet government rules could find themselves banned from taking in foreign students – a huge risk when the tuition fees they pay make up around a quarter of British universities’ income streams.

In response, many universities have imposed tighter vetting procedures for applicants from Pakistan and Bangladesh, while others have paused applications from those countries altogether.

The London Metropolitan University, for instance, told CNA it suspended applications from Bangladesh after a spike in Home Office refusals.

Gary Davies, the university’s deputy vice-chancellor, said 60 to 65 per cent of rejected applicants had come from Bangladesh, suggesting the government considers it a high-risk region.

While the government expects the changes to curb abuse, critics warn they are also shutting out genuine students.

Md Humayun Roshid, founder of the Bangladeshi Students Association UK, said he supports stronger compliance, but felt action should have been taken earlier to avoid such sweeping consequences.