Leading NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul has hit out at Britain's restrictive student visa policy, a day after Prime Minister David Cameron said there was no limit on the number of Indian students coming to his country.
Delivering the inaugural India Link Lecture here on 'Indo-British Relations - The Way Forward', Lord Paul said, "The top students in our key recruiting nations are choosing to attend universities in Canada, Australia and the US."
"The UK is now seen as an unfriendly place for international students and we are fast loosing our place in the international market," he said.
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"A major objective to the changes in the student visa policy was to attract high calibre students to study in the UK. This has not happened," Lord Paul, Chancellor of two British Universities - Wolverhampton and Westminster - said.
"Changing our immigration policies to remove students from the net migration figures will show the world that we are open to genuine, hard-working students from all nations. We must also provide opportunity for them to work in the UK for two years following their studies," he said.
Lord Paul's criticism of the changes in the UK's visa policy came a day after Cameron said in India that there was no limit on the number of Indian students in his country.
"There is no limit on the number of Indian students in Britain... What is needed is genuine students who have genuine British university admissions," Cameron said in New Delhi.
Lord Paul said he was disappointed with the negative worldwide publicity of the UK's visa system and the effect it is having on current and potential international students.
"In, May last year, I, along with 67 fellow University leaders in the UK Higher Education sector, wrote to the Prime Minister outlining our concerns about changes to the visa policy for incoming international students," he said.
"We asked the government not to include students in the net immigration statistics. However, the government chose to implement their policies and we are now seeing the repercussions," he said.