This Article is From Aug 07, 2009

UK hunts for hundreds of 'bogus' foreign students

London:
The government is trying to locate hundreds of foreign students who are living in Britain after coming to the UK to study at "bogus" colleges, a news report said on Friday.

Amid stepped up pressure from the opposition Conservative Party, the authorities are trying to hunt for nearly 4,000 foreign students who are living in the country after arriving to study at "bogus" colleges, whose licences have been revoked by the government, The Independent newspaper reported.

The Tories have flayed the ruling Labour for not taking the problem seriously enough. Despite the government's claims to have tightened up the student visa system, they have failed to crack down on high numbers of "bogus" students who are already here, Damian Green, the Conservative Party's immigration spokesman, was quoted as saying by the British daily.

The Opposition said those students who entered the UK before 1 April 2009 and were enrolled at a "bogus" college had entered the UK on fraudulent purposes.

According to the Home Office, the total number of foreign students who enrolled at colleges which have
subsequently been refused a sponsor licence by the UK Border Agency is about 3,940.

Earlier, the British House of Commons was informed that there could be a large number of "bogus" students enrolled in over 2,000 colleges in Britain amid fears that people recruited into terrorism may have used these institutions as a means to get into the country. 
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