Universities crack down on Indian students as fraudulent visa applications surge

Australian universities are taking action against fraudulent visa applications by Indian students, amid concerns that Australia's immigration system is being compromised.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi in front of a line of Indian and Australian flags.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese met with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi last month, announcing a new higher education partnership between Australia and India. Source: LightRocket / Pacific Press / Getty Images

Key Points
  • Australian universities are taking action against fraudulent visa applications by Indian students.
  • The government and higher education sector are concerned about the integrity of Australia's immigration system.
  • Applications from Indian students rebounded faster than expected since the post-COVID reopening of borders.
Australian universities are cracking down on students from some Indian states amid a surge in fraudulent visa applications.

There are concerns in the government and higher education sector that the integrity of Australia's immigration system is at risk, with migrants seeking to game as an easier pathway to access work rights.
Since the reopening of borders to international students after the COVID-19 pandemic, applications have rebounded faster than expected.

Annual applications from Indian students in particular are expected to exceed a pre-pandemic high of 75,000 after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Indian counterpart Narendra Modi signed a wide-ranging agreement making it easier for citizens to travel and study between the two countries.
An i found five universities — Victoria University, Edith Cowan University, the University of Wollongong, Torrens University, and education agents working for Southern Cross University — are putting in place bans on Indian students from some states to pre-empt greater restrictions being imposed by the Department of Home Affairs.

Home Affairs applies ratings to countries they deem to have a higher risk of entrants not abiding by the terms of their visas.
The department told the newspapers that since the easing of COVID-19 border restrictions in 2021 they had "witnessed an increase in incomplete applications and presentation of fraudulent information and documentation in student visa applications".

Applications from South Asian countries surged after the Morrison government removed limits restricting student visa holders to a maximum of 20 hours of work per week.

In February, Home Affairs rejected 94 per cent of applications from India to study in Australia's vocational sector, compared to less than 1 per cent of student applications from countries including the US, the UK and France.
Insiders have accused education agencies, who help recruit prospective international students in exchange for commissions, of misleading conduct in order to attract more applicants.

In March, Canada's border security agency expelled more than 150 Indian students for entering the country on forged college admission letters.

The students claimed to have been duped by an immigration consultation agency in India that provided them with the forgeries.

A federal parliamentary inquiry into international education is holding its first hearing on Tuesday.

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3 min read
Published 18 April 2023 12:38pm
Source: AAP



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