Middle-East countries to pay £3,000 cash bond deposit for U.K. Visa
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India has been put on a list of “high-risk” Asian and African countries
whose citizens would be required to deposit £3,000 cash bond when they
apply for a British visa.
- The money would be forfeited if they overstay.
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Controversially, the move is targeted only at people from non-white
Commonwealth countries as part of the Tory-led government’s resolve to
drastically cut down on immigration level.
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According to The Sunday Times, the scheme — aimed at preventing abuse of
immigration rules — will initially cover India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka, Nigeria and Ghana.
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“They have been designated ‘high-risk’ countries, from which visitors
aged over 18 on six-month visit visas will be forced to pay the £3,000
from November. The countries are being targeted by the Home Office
because of the high volume of visitor visa applications and relatively
high levels of fraud and abuse,” it said.
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The Home Office said these countries posed “the most significant risk of abuse” by their citizens.
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Home Secretary Theresa May said the move was part of the government’s policy to make the immigration system “more selective.”
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“This is the next step in making sure our immigration system is more
selective, bringing down net migration from the hundreds of thousands to
the tens of thousands while still welcoming the brightest and the best
to Britain … In the long run, we are interested in a system of bonds
that deters overstaying and recovers costs if a foreign national has
used our public services,” she said.
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