Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
India

UK To Ease Visa Cap Blocking Indian Doctors

IANS, 14 Jun, 2018 12:03 PM
    The UK government is set to ease its immigration cap blocking professionals such as Indian doctors from being brought in to tackle shortages in the state-funded National Health Service (NHS).
     
     
    UK home secretary Sajid Javid, who had promised a review on the issue earlier this month, will make a formal announcement on removing doctors and nurses from countries outside the European Union (EU) from the UK's annual visa cap of 20,700 on Friday.
     
     
    As part of the announcement, Javid is also expected to announce a wider ease up of the Tier 2 visa category to allow companies to be able to recruit highly-skilled professionals from non-EU countries.
     
     
    The cap, currently on a monthly limit of around 1,600, is likely to be raised on a temporary basis to address shortages and needs of particular professions.
     
     
    The move follows lobbying from healthcare groups around the country, including the British Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (BAPIO).
     
     
    "It is a first step to victory. The proof of the pudding will be in its eating and we eagerly await the details," said Dr Ramesh Mehta, President of the BAPIO.
     
     
    "We had suggested a separate immigration category for healthcare workers and hope the Home Office would consider that proposal positively," he said.
     
     
    The BAPIO has previously said that it has qualified Indian doctors on its list who can come in to the UK on a short-term basis to fill NHS shortages and gain training in the process.
     
     
    However, the UK government's annual immigration target means they are not even applying as they will be refused a visa because of the monthly cap on overseas professionals being hit.
     
     
     
     
    The cap under the Tier 2 visa category to allow companies to bring in professionals from outside the EU is set at 20,700 per year, with a monthly limit of around 1,600. Until December last year, that limit had been exceeded only once in almost six years but since then that cap has been reached nearly every month.
     
     
    According to latest figures, as many as 2,360 visa applications from non-EU doctors had been refused over the last few months – many of them from India.
     
     
    The BAPIO and other groups had branded the government policy a "disaster", resulting in a "Scrap the Cap" campaign by the 'British Medical Journal'.
     
     
    The British Medical Association (BMA), 12 medical royal colleges, NHS Employers, and other professional bodies had co-authored a letter to Javid last month asking for the visa cap to be reviewed.
     
     
    British Prime Minister Theresa May, who had introduced the cap during her time as UK home secretary, had been opposed to any easing of immigration rule but has now been forced to buckle under pressure from within her own Cabinet.
     
     
    "This is going to be a huge relief for trusts up and down the country who have been really struggling to fill their doctors and nurses vacancies," said Saffron Cordery of trade body NHS Providers.
     
     
    NHS England had 35,000 nurse vacancies and nearly 10,000 doctor posts unfilled as of February this year. Javid had triggered hope during an interview earlier this month that he plans to review the country's visa policy to ensure these vacancies can be filled up.
     
     
    "Perhaps this is a sign that Sajid Javid is willing to take a bolder and more flexible approach to immigration, and deliver the kind of system that Britain will need after we leave the EU," said Sunder Katwala, director of the immigration think-tank British Future.
     
     
     
     
    "It never made sense to turn away doctors and nurses that the NHS needs," he added. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Special Investigation Team To Reopen 75 Cases Of 1984 Anti-sikh Riots, AAP Taunts BJP

    Special Investigation Team To Reopen 75 Cases Of 1984 Anti-sikh Riots, AAP Taunts BJP
    "Reopen cases now? What did they do in one and half years? BJP set up SIT only to prevent AAP from forming effective SIT," Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal tweeted on Sunday.

    Special Investigation Team To Reopen 75 Cases Of 1984 Anti-sikh Riots, AAP Taunts BJP

    Thousands Expected For Yoga Day Celebrations In New York's Times Square

    Thousands Expected For Yoga Day Celebrations In New York's Times Square
    The Times Square community event will likely be the biggest Yoga Day celebration outside India. The day-long series of seven events that run from 7 am to 8.30 p.m. will stretch over several city blocks.

    Thousands Expected For Yoga Day Celebrations In New York's Times Square

    India's Only Sanskrit Daily, Sudharma, Fights For Survival

    India's Only Sanskrit Daily, Sudharma, Fights For Survival
    After 45 years of publishing, Sudharma faces acute financial crunch.

    India's Only Sanskrit Daily, Sudharma, Fights For Survival

    BJP's Gandhi Emerges As A Poster Boy In Allahabad

    Alongside Varun Gandhi's hoardings and posters of varying sizes in the city are those of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah.

    BJP's Gandhi Emerges As A Poster Boy In Allahabad

    How A Remote Hill Village Became Centre Of Artistic Transformation

    How A Remote Hill Village Became Centre Of Artistic Transformation
    A remote village in the picturesque Kangra district of Himachal Pradesh is experiencing its brush with contemporary art.

    How A Remote Hill Village Became Centre Of Artistic Transformation

    Punjab Government Not Contemplating Ban On Udta Punjab: Shiromani Akali Dal

    Punjab Government Not Contemplating Ban On Udta Punjab: Shiromani Akali Dal
    The Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) today said the Punjab government was not contemplating any ban on Shahid Kapoor-starrer 'Udta Punjab', which is caught in a censorship row, and alleged Aam Aadmi Party's "hand" in the making of the film to defame the state.

    Punjab Government Not Contemplating Ban On Udta Punjab: Shiromani Akali Dal