Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
International

UK Admits Error In Refusing Some Indian Professionals Settlement Rights

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Nov, 2018 01:45 PM
    The UK government on Thursday admitted that errors were made in denying some Indian skilled professionals the right to live and work in the UK over a controversial clause in the immigration rules questioning their good conduct and character.
     
     
    The UK Home Office admitted that around 31 applications will be re-assessed at the conclusion of an internal review into the issue of visa applicants, largely from South Asian countries, being refused settlement rights over perceived dishonesty in reporting their earnings to the country's tax department.
     
     
    Among the 31 cases, 12 have been identified as incorrect refusals and will be overturned to give the applicants settlement rights in the UK. The remaining 19 cases will require more information from applicants before reconsidering their cases.
     
     
    "The Home Office will contact each of the 31 individuals concerned to resolve their cases by the end of December. Errors of this kind are always regrettable, and I do not seek to minimise the impact that the error may have had on the individuals concerned," UK immigration minister Caroline Nokes said in a statement to Parliament.
     
     
    "I will also ensure that the findings in this small minority of cases are used to inform our future decision making, to ensure that similar errors are not repeated," she said.
     
     
    While individual case information is not openly shared, according to campaigners, a large number of these applicants are from India, with other nationalities including Pakistani and Bangladeshi.
     
     
    "The review has given us the opportunity to look at all cases and identify a scale of issues. Whilst we believe the majority of these have demonstrated patterns of behaviour that bring into question the character and conduct of applicants, these cases have also given a fresh perspective on the minority of more finely balanced cases, the findings of which we will feed into our future decision-making process," the Home Office review notes.
     
     
    The issue involves skilled professionals who were entitled to apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), or permanent settlement, after a minimum of five years' lawful residency in the UK. While the Tier 1 (General) visa they used to enter the country was discontinued in 2011, former applicants were eligible to apply for settlement in the country until April this year if they made up the required number of points on their application.
     
     
    However, legal experts noted a pattern of many such applications being turned down by Home Office caseworkers citing clause 322 (5) of the UK Immigration Act, a discretionary rule aimed at denying convicted criminals and terrorists the right to live in the UK.
     
     
    The Home Office questioned the "good character" of these professionals over apparent differences in their declared earnings to the UK tax department and the Home Office in order to make up the required points on their settlement application.
     
     
    Nokes, the minister in charge, had launched a review into the cases earlier this year to distinguish between those involving "genuine fraud" and others that may have fallen victim to "overzealous" caseworkers.
     
     
    Following the publication of the review on Thursday, she stressed that the issue had led to wrong decisions only in "minority of cases" but that the rule was largely applied correctly.
     
     
    "Applicants were given the opportunity to explain these discrepancies. In many cases, having taken all the evidence and applicants' explanations into account, we were not satisfied that these were minor tax errors as claimed, but attempts to misrepresent self-employed earnings, most likely for the purposes of obtaining leave or settlement in the UK," she said.
     
     
    The Home Office review examined 1,697 applications refused since January 2015 and found that discrepancies between the earnings declared to the Home Office and those shown on tax records were over GBP 10,000 in 88 per cent of cases (1,490).
     
     
    However, campaigners who had launched online petitions and lobbied parliamentarians over the issue, focused on the review's findings that not all discrepancies were of a fraudulent nature and as many as 65 per cent of appeals in such cases had been allowed by the courts.
     
     
    On an overall review of the policy of applying clause 322(5) itself, the Home Office review said it is expected that the UK's Court of Appeal will provide more clarity on many of these issues early next year and it will consider the matter again in the light of the future rulings.
     
     
    "The fact that clause 322(5) was used disproportionately has been established. And now, some of these applicants who have been undergoing an appeals process will continue to be left in limbo well into the new year," said Aditi Bhardwaj, from London-based Eldons Berkeley Solicitors, who had initiated the campaign over the issue.
     
     
    "At least these migrants can be given some basic rights until the judgment comes from the Court of Appeal, so they can work and feed their children and regain some mental peace," she said.
     
     
    A test case of four applicants - a majority of whom are Indians - have been clubbed together by the Court of Appeal, which will determine the future use of clause 322(5) in similar settlement applications. A ruling in the test case is expected in January 2019.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Professor Arul Chinnaiyan Awarded $6.5 Million To Improve Cancer Diagnosis

    Indian-Origin Professor Arul Chinnaiyan Awarded $6.5 Million To Improve Cancer Diagnosis
    The US National Cancer Institute has give the "Outstanding Investigator Award" to Professor Arul Chinnaiyan, from the University of Michigan, and $6.5 million in funding over seven years, to identify cancer biomarkers to improve diagnosis and develop new targeted therapies.

    Indian-Origin Professor Arul Chinnaiyan Awarded $6.5 Million To Improve Cancer Diagnosis

    Indian Man Kills Roommate For Talking Loudly On Phone In Dubai

    Indian Man Kills Roommate For Talking Loudly On Phone In Dubai
    An Indian man has been charged with stabbing to death his roommate for talking loudly on the phone.

    Indian Man Kills Roommate For Talking Loudly On Phone In Dubai

    India-Born Woman Student Nandakumar Rajalakshmi To Get 'Young Scholar' Award In US

    India-Born Woman Student Nandakumar Rajalakshmi To Get 'Young Scholar' Award In US
    "Nandakumar Rajalakshmi is the winner of this year's Young Scholar Award for her outstanding research work in detecting life-threatening symptoms using smartphones," the Society said in an e-mail to IANS.

    India-Born Woman Student Nandakumar Rajalakshmi To Get 'Young Scholar' Award In US

    Ludhiana-Born ANSHDEEP SINGH BHATIA First Sikh To Be Inducted Into Trump's Security

    Ludhiana-Born ANSHDEEP SINGH BHATIA First Sikh To Be Inducted Into Trump's Security
    Anshdeep stumbled upon a block when he was told he would have to change his looks. But he moved the court against the riders and the decision came out in his favour.

    Ludhiana-Born ANSHDEEP SINGH BHATIA First Sikh To Be Inducted Into Trump's Security

    Transgender In Pakistan Set On Fire By 4 Men For Resisting Sexual Assault

    Transgender In Pakistan Set On Fire By 4 Men For Resisting Sexual Assault
    According to police, the four accused took the transgender to a deserted place near a cab station in Sahiwal district, around 250 kms from Lahore, on Thursday and set him on fire after he resisted their attempt to sexually assault him.

    Transgender In Pakistan Set On Fire By 4 Men For Resisting Sexual Assault

    Sold As Domestic Help In Oman, Punjab Woman Returns Home After 9 Months

    Sold As Domestic Help In Oman, Punjab Woman Returns Home After 9 Months
    A 30-year-old woman from Punjab, who was allegedly sold as a domestic help in Oman, returned home on Monday.

    Sold As Domestic Help In Oman, Punjab Woman Returns Home After 9 Months