According to a report by UK
Daily Mail, visitors from 'high risk' countries in Africa and Asia will have to
put up a £3,000 cash bond to enter Britain.
The money will be kept by
the Government if visitors do not return home by the time their visas expire.
A pilot scheme, introduced
by Home Secretary Theresa May, will target hundreds of people coming to Britain
on six-month visit visas from India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Ghana, Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh.
The countries have been
picked for their high number of visa applications and what the Government sees
as relatively high levels of immigration abuse and fraud, reports the Sunday
Times.
The bonds, to be introduced
from November, will only apply to non-EU migrants, otherwise they would fall
foul of European rights to free movement.
'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,' Mrs May told the Sunday
Times.
'In the long run we’re
interested in a system of bonds that deters overstaying and recovers costs if a
foreign national has used our public services.'
A second scheme will cover
countries such as Kenya, the newspaper reports, which are considered to be
lower-risk because immigration officials have fewer doubts about migrants'
plans to return home.
About 2.2million people are
granted visas to enter Britain every year. Last year 296,000 people from India
were granted six-month visas, as were 101,000 from Nigeria, 53,000 from
Pakistan and 14,000 apiece from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
The Home Secretary plans to
reduce annual net migration to under 100,000 by 2015.
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