British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Richard Montgomery, says the UK government’s new policy on the restriction of foreign student visas is aimed at managing the pressure on social services for scholars.
Montgomery, who said this during an interview with the News
Agency of Nigeria in Abuja, explained that the policy was not targeted at
discouraging Nigerian students studying in the UK.
He urged Nigerians to see the new visa regime in the UK in a
bigger context, which he said is “really a positive for Nigeria and the United
Kingdom.”
He stated that, at the moment, Nigerians desiring to study
in the UK have a 97 per cent visa approval rate.
“Three years ago, there were 20,000 Nigerian students in
British higher education institutions, and last year, the number increased to
127,000.
“So, we had a five-fold increase in the number of students
from Nigeria coming to UK universities.
“We are delighted that UK universities continue to attract
the best and brightest from Nigeria.”
The envoy stated that, in 2022, “the UK granted three
million new UK visas of various types, including students and other visitors.”
He added, “Nigerians alone received 325,000 of those three
million visas.
“So more than 10 per cent of the visas from the UK are to
Nigerian citizens which is fantastic.
“It goes back to the fact that the UK and Nigeria have
strong people-to-people links.”
“The policy change is about people who are doing
non-research degrees coming to the UK as undergraduates, or for a one-year
master’s degree programme, and who decide to bring their dependents.
“We have had a very significant rise in the number of people
coming from all around the world, not just from Nigeria.
“This has caused some strain on the UK.
“Sometimes it is difficult to find good accommodation as a
student and there is real pressure on housing and social services for students.
“If you looked at it three years ago, only 1,500 dependents
of students were coming to the UK from Nigeria, but now it was 52,000 last
year.
“I am just trying to put it in proper context, that this is
an adjustment.
“The words that are being used in the media to describe the
situation are misrepresenting. We are making an adjustment that enables us to
manage the demands on services in university towns and elsewhere.
“Nigerians are very successful in acquiring visas. We have a
97 per cent approval rate and so that is the big context,” Montgomery said.
He expressed the UK’s pride in its research institutes and
higher education which, he said, were listed among the top hundred universities
in the world.
The higher institutions, he said, are very open to students
going to study in the UK.
He expressed the belief that Nigerians stand to gain
massively from the international exposure and international networks offered by
studying in the UK.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the UK Home Office
in May announced that from January 2024, undergraduate and master’s students
would no longer be allowed to take their dependents along with them to the UK.
The restriction does not apply to students in research
programmes. NAN