Britain is planning to force visitors from India, Pakistan, Nigeria and
other countries whose nationals are deemed to pose a “high risk” of
immigration abuse to provide a cash bond before they can enter the
country, a report said yesterday.
The Sunday Times newspaper said that from November, a pilot scheme would
target visitors from those three countries plus Bangladesh, Sri Lanka
and Ghana. Visitors aged 18 and over would be forced to hand over
£3,000 ($4,600, 3,500 euros) from November for a six-month visit visa.
They will forfeit the money if they overstay in Britain after their visa
has expired. Initially the scheme will target hundreds of visitors, but
the plan is to extend it to several thousand, according to the
broadsheet’s front-page report.
The weekly paper said the move by Home Secretary Theresa May is designed
to show that Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservative Party is
serious about cutting immigration and abuses of the system.
Last year 296,000 people granted six-month visas were from India,
101,000 from Nigeria, 53,000 from Pakistan and 14,000 each were from Sri
Lanka and Bangladesh.
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