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UK Universities halt admissions from Bangladesh, Pakistan over alleged visa misuse concerns

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UK Universities halt admissions from Bangladesh, Pakistan over alleged visa misuse concerns

by Nigahban News
December 6, 2025
in International
0
UK Universities halt admissions from Bangladesh, Pakistan over alleged visa misuse concerns

Several universities in the United Kingdom have begun suspending or halting admissions of students from Bangladesh and Pakistan amid tightened immigration controls and rising concerns over alleged visa misuse.
According to the Financial Times, at least nine UK higher education institutions have imposed restrictions on applicants from what they classify as “high-risk” countries. The move follows a sharp rise in visa refusal rates and asylum claims linked to international students.

Among the affected institutions, the University of Wolverhampton has stopped accepting undergraduate applications from both Bangladesh and Pakistan, while the Universities of Sunderland and Coventry have suspended recruitment from the two countries.

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London Metropolitan University has confirmed that it has halted Bangladeshi admissions, citing that 60 percent of its visa refusals came from Bangladeshi applicants. The University of Chester has suspended admissions from Pakistan until autumn 2026, and the University of Hertfordshire has paused recruitment from both countries until next year.

The tightening comes after the UK Home Office revised its Basic Compliance Assessment rules in September, lowering the acceptable visa refusal threshold for universities from 10 per cent to 5 per cent. Institutions that fail to meet the new standard risk losing their licence to sponsor international students.

Official figures show that visa refusal rates for Bangladeshi and Pakistani applicants stood at 22 per cent and 18 per cent respectively as of September 2025, well above the new limit. Together, the two countries accounted for nearly half of the 23,036 student visa refusals during the period.

UK Border Security Minister Dame Angela Eagle has warned that the visa system must not be used as a “back door” to settlement, following a rise in asylum applications by foreign nationals who initially entered on student or work visas.
Education consultants in both countries have expressed concern that genuine students are being affected by the growing restrictions, urging greater awareness and responsible use of student visa routes.

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