In his critique of the sector鈥檚 approach to student visa policy (鈥In the twilight zone鈥, 21 February), Simeon Underwood suggests that the National Union of Students is 鈥渋nside the [government] tent鈥 because students have been put 鈥渁t the heart of the system鈥, and that 鈥渨ild-eyed radical leaders of the past, such as Jack Straw and Stephen Twigg, have been replaced by decent young men in suits鈥. Now, although I plead guilty to occasionally wearing a suit and I strive to be decent, I fear that Underwood has fallen for government rhetoric and lost sight of the reality.
The charge that we have 鈥渉elped the government in developing some of its central policies鈥 seems disingenuous, not least in relation to the 鈥渟tudents as consumers鈥 agenda my colleagues and I have robustly criticised. This year, the NUS has focused on more proactive campaigns for international students precisely because the government has refused to listen: if you hail from abroad, you remain far from the heart of the system.
The NUS has challenged unacceptable visa-processing delays; successfully intervened in the High Court to defend students against the impact of the UK Border Agency鈥檚 decision to revoke London Metropolitan University鈥檚 highly trusted sponsor status; and achieved small but significant victories on attendance monitoring by forcing the UKBA to clarify that it does not expect international students to be singled out.
We have also worked with the UK Council for International Student Affairs, Universities UK and the Institute of Directors to make the case for overseas students to be removed from the net migration statistics, buoyed by cross-party support from stalwart MPs such as Labour鈥檚 Paul Blomfield and the Conservatives鈥 Nadhim Zahawi: indeed, we have gained backing from no fewer than five select committees. It is clear that we have won the argument with the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, too, but the remaining roadblock is the 糖心Vlog Office.
It is not just piecemeal lobbying in air-conditioned rooms that occupies us - and nor would that solve all our problems. We have also told the stories of human misery too often suppressed by an immigration system that dehumanises overseas students, collecting enough case studies in the past 12 months to write a fairly large book. This is why we have launched a campaign urging supporters to 鈥溾.
It is clear that the current approach to international students is doing huge damage to the sector, the economy and our global reputation, but crucially also to students鈥 lives. Speeding up visa processing is no magic bullet in itself, particularly when, in the context of heavily constrained budgets and overworked staff, reprioritisation would, ceteris paribus, lead to delays in processing urgent asylum applications. It would also fail to deal with the overarching problem: the government鈥檚 treatment of international students. To that end, I would urge Underwood and everyone who disagrees with the way such students are being treated to join us in calling 鈥渇oul鈥. Target criticism where it is deserved: show Theresa May the yellow card.
Daniel Stevens
International students officer
NUS
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