SYDNEY: Australia yesterday axed 20,000 migrant applications in a major overhaul aimed at clamping down on foreign students gaining permanent residency through courses such as hairdressing and cookery.
Immigration Minister Chris Evans said the reforms, which follow a sudden rise in Australia's Indian population and an embarrassing rash of attacks on students from the country, would give priority to migrants with higher skills.
Evans said about 20,000 overseas applicants would have their fees refunded at a cost of $14 million ($12 million US), while new rules would require better English skills and target the "best and brightest".
"The current points test puts an overseas student with a short-term vocational qualification gained in Australia ahead of a Harvard-educated environmental scientist," Evans said.
The new measures are likely to weigh on Australia's large overseas education sector, which successfully targeted Asian students to become the country's fourth largest earner of foreign money.
The sector has been hit by widespread allegations of shoddy practice and visa scams by migration agents, and several institutions were forced to close last year.
A senior consultant from IDP China, a study abroad agency, said that the number of applicants they have received so far this year is less than that of the same period last year. "There are also less enquiries because of Australia's policy change," Zhao Xiaoyan said.
Zhao said half of the applicants applying with the agency which specializes in Australia, are aiming at permanent residency while the other half hope to find work in the country on completion of their education abroad.
"If their ultimate goal is the permanent residency in Australia then there will be more difficulties facing their ways."
Zhao said the changes of policies in Australian universities and stricter visa requirements will also make studying in the country appear less attractive to Chinese students.
Evans said the current Migration Occupations in Demand List (MODL) had prompted a massive influx in foreign students attending courses that put them in line for permanent residency.
"We had tens of thousands of students studying cookery and accounting and hairdressing because that was on the list, those subjects were on the list and that got them through to permanent residency," he told ABC radio.
Australia attracted some 117,000 Indian students in the year to October, about 19 percent of foreign enrollments. Other major source countries include China, South Korea, Nepal, Thailand and Brazil.
Hundreds of Indians have been robbed and assaulted in Australia over the past 18 months, prompting allegations of racism and media outrage in the South Asian country.
Britain last week said it would slash its number of foreign visa students and raise English requirements to stop people coming to the country to work illegally.
(www.eduwo.com, Anna)