War waged on skilled worker scam

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Responding to what it claims is a widespread scam, the Government has announced a crackdown on bogus Tier-2 visa sponsorships that could lead to up to 2,500 migrants having to leave Britain.

Government reforms are cracking down on abuse, claims security minister James Brokenshire
Government reforms are cracking down on abuse, claims security minister James Brokenshire

An investigation by immigration officials has revealed that migrants are being given Tier-2 visas for jobs that don’t exist, or are completely different from those advertised. The probe claims to expose jobs in petrol stations, massage parlours and kebab shops being advertised by employers as highly skilled positions, as part of the process for obtaining a Tier-2 visa. Examples of this include an advert for a £30,000 a year salesperson for a corner shop, and adverts for a PR manager for a takeaway, and for two ‘family therapists’ for a Thai massage parlour.

Tier-2 visas are for ‘skilled workers’ who will be employed by a company with a Tier-2 sponsorship licence. The most recent list of these jobs available from the Government include nuclear medicine scientists, specialist signal engineers for the railway industry and chemistry and physics teachers.

Last year Rashid Ghauri and Ali Junejo were jailed for an immigration scam via a company that they ran called Techsense. The Border Agency awarded the firm some 120 certificates of sponsorship over a three-year period after it gave them a sponsor licence in 2008. The judge in the case, Judge Ross, said that the UK Border Force was guilty of a “catastrophic failure to check the material that had been provided.”

Ghauri and Junejo recruited more than 120 migrants from Pakistan for management level jobs in IT, but in reality the immigrants ended up working in lower level positions at supermarkets and fast food restaurants. It is thought that Ghauri and Junejo made more than half a million pounds by selling visas for up to £4,500 each.

Immigration and Security Minister James Brokenshire says that this latest crackdown is an indication that the current system is working. He said: “We’ve all heard the stories under the last government of people on skilled visas working as takeaway drivers – but our reforms are cracking down on abuse.

“The fact that fewer than two per cent of Tier-2 sponsor licence applications were refused under the old government is ample illustration of the open-door immigration policy and the incompetence of the UK Border Agency in administering it.

“Crackdowns like this are yet another example of how we are building an immigration system that works for British nationals and legitimate migrants, and is tough on those who flout the rules.”

Statistics show that in 2008, only 1.7% of Tier-2 visa applications were rejected by the Government. The refusal rate has now risen to 37%, making it more difficult for migrants to come under the Tier-2 visa scheme.

UKIP MEP Steven Woolfe has criticised the current government, saying that they are “late to the table” to fix the problems with the current immigration system.

He said: “Employers should not be able to employ a foreign worker unless they are skilled and earn more than £40,000 per year and more staff should be employed to check that the rules are enforced.

“Only then will we really be employing the skilled managers that the system was meant to do and not be used to undercut wages in the UK.”

However, others argue that the Government is now making it too difficult to meet the Tier-2 visa requirements and that many Tier-2 sponsorship licences and Tier-2 visas are being refused for entirely ‘bogus’ reasons due to political pressure to make it look as though it is taking positive steps to reduce immigration.