Updated on: Monday, September 17, 2012
Britain announced a new fund of 2 million pounds to help Indian and other non-EU students caught by the revocation of London Metropolitan University's licence to admit and teach international students.
LMU's licence was revoked on August 29, throwing the academic future of over 350 Indian and over 2,250 other non-EU current students in disarray.
After the licence revocation, they are required to apply for similar courses in other universities and reapply for student visas.
Universities minister David Willetts told a conference of Universities UK that the 2 million pounds fund was intended to "to help legitimate overseas students at London Met who face extra costs through no fault of their own".
The money will be used to help with the costs of students transferring to other universities and to make new visa applications. Those unable to transfer to another university by December 1 will be required to leave the UK within 60 days.
Soon after the licence revocation, Willetts had set up a taskforce to help current students transfer to other universities to pursue and complete their courses.
The taskforce is in the process carrying out its mandate.
LMU, meanwhile, has filed a judicial review petition in the high court, challenging UK Border Agency's decision to revoke its licence.
UKBA had revoked the university's licence citing "serious and systemic failures".
During his speech at Keele University, Willetts indicated that the government was considering the demand of almost all stakeholders in higher education to remove the numbers of international students from overall immigration figures, since most students return home after completing their studies.
Willetts told the conference that the government wanted to publish more detailed figures on overseas students that "disaggregate" them from total figures on net migration.
He said the Office for National Statistics was working on ways to "better count students in immigration flows".
Willetts said: "Without international students, we would not only be poorer economically - we would also be more boring, more insular, and more ignorant of the wider world.
That is why transparency in the immigration statistics is vital. We therefore want to publicise disaggregated figures so that the debate can be better informed".
Eric Thomas, president of Universities UK, warned in his speech to the conference that the LMU crisis meant that "we appear to have arrived at a situation with overseas students in which our country invites ridicule or at the very least
astonishment".
He added that the sector and the country had not "fulfilled our duties to (London Met international students) as human beings, never mind as students".
He said the majority of those students threatened with deportation due to the licence revocation were bona fide.