UK group renews call for justice for students accused of English test cheating

Press Trust of India  |  London 

A migrant group lobbying the Office in favour of overseas students, many of them from India, "wrongly" accused of cheating in a compulsory visa-related English language exam renewed its call for justice on Wednesday.

The group had found the backing of many British MPs last year, who set up an All (APPG) to mount pressure on Javid to "rethink" the government's handling of the issue.

The campaigners want the students to be allowed to re-sit the English exam in order to prove their innocence after a exposed cases of fraud in the government-mandated tests back in 2014.

"The core demand is for the Office/government to allow the students to re-sit the test and those who pass should be: given their visa back, allowed to return to study or work and to drop the criminal allegation against them," said

"The treatment of these students has been appalling," said Opposition Stephen Timms, who helped set up the APPG dedicated to the cause.

The issue dates back nearly five years, when aired an investigation into colleges offering the Test of English for International Communication (TOEIC) exams and revealed some cases of cheating.

The responded by launching an investigation and concluded that 33,725 of the test results were invalid and 22,694 questionable. Those with questionable results were given the chance of review but the others were made to abandon their courses and, in many cases, forced to return to their countries of origin.

Migrant Voice, which released the 'I want my future back' report last year to highlight the plight of many who claim to be wrongly clubbed in the invalid category, estimates nearly 56,000 students were caught up in the scandal. While many have since returned to their countries of origin or forcibly deported, thousands have remained in the UK to fight their cause.

A Migrant Voice statement notes: "Many are destitute and suffering severe health problems. Many have contemplated or attempted suicide. Unable to travel home to see their families, most have missed the funerals and weddings of loved ones.

"Those who have left the UK can't get work and many have been rejected by their families."

The group wants that those still struggling to clear their names should be allowed to sit a new secure English language test so that the criminal allegations against them can be quashed.

"I have asked my officials to review it. We had a further meeting to make some final decisions," Javid told the Commons earlier this month, when the issue was raised again in Parliament.

The confirmed that the was looking into the issue but did not lay out a timeframe for any resolution to the dispute.

"The 2014 investigation into the abuse of English language testing revealed systemic cheating which was indicative of significant organised fraud," a Home Office said.

"The scale of this is shown by the fact that 25 people who facilitated this fraud have received criminal convictions, including four individuals convicted earlier this month of conspiracy to commit fraud. Since then the Home Office has reformed the system to tackle abuse," the said.

The scandal involved the requirement for some UK visa applicants to pass a test of proficiency in written and spoken English. One of the approved tests, TOEIC, was provided by US-based firm ETS at a large number of test centres across Britain.

Campaigners have questioned the software used to ascertain the cases of cheating in the spoken module of the test in the wake of the TV expose in 2014.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 24 2019. 21:15 IST