UK denies visas to some winners of Chevening, its own most prestigious scholarship
Vnexpress
In 2024, 16 Chevening awards went to students from Sudan, 13 from Afghanistan, 10 from Myanmar and eight from Cameroon, according to government data cited by The PIE News. All are countries engulfed in armed conflict or humanitarian crisis.
Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper requested that Chevening scholars be exempted from the ban, but Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood rejected the appeal. What will happen to scholars who already received their awards has not been announced.
The University of Sussex's vice-chancellor wrote to 33 MPs and peers warning the ban would have "profound consequences" for the U.K.'s global reputation and soft power, Research Professional News reported.
The Home Office said the ban was driven by data, not the merits of individual scholarships. Between 2021 and 2025, asylum claims by students from the four countries rose by more than 470%, according to a government press release. In total, 133,760 people from the four nations claimed asylum after arriving on legal routes over five years. The proportion of Afghan asylum claims to study visas issued reached 95%, and asylum applications by students from Myanmar increased 16-fold over the same period, the government said. Claims by students from Cameroon and Sudan spiked by more than 330%.
A Home Office spokesperson said student programs were being exploited as a "back door" for asylum claims, the Times Higher Education reported. The spokesperson said the U.K. was making no exceptions to prevent growing abuse of the immigration system, while remaining open to outstanding talent.
Critics called the policy "exceptionally cruel and short-sighted."
Human rights group Burma Campaign U.K. said the decision denied Myanmar's future leaders one of their few remaining opportunities, according to Times Higher Education.
Afghanistan has barred women and girls from education beyond primary school since the Taliban takeover in 2021, making scholarships abroad one of the only paths to higher education for Afghan women.
The visa ban is part of a broader tightening of U.K. immigration rules over the past two years. Financial evidence requirements for student visas were raised in November 2025, with international students now needing to show between £1,171 and £1,529 (($1,558 - $2,034) per month depending on location, according to government guidance. Dependants of students must now prove English proficiency to enter or remain in the country, under rules outlined in the May 2025 immigration white paper.
Universities face tougher oversight through updated Basic Compliance Assessment thresholds, requiring a minimum 95% enrollment rate and 90% course completion rate to sponsor international students. A new Red-Amber-Green rating system publicly tracks institutional performance, with underperforming universities facing recruitment caps, The PIE News reported.
The government has also proposed doubling the qualifying period for permanent residence from five to 10 years for most migrants, under an "earned settlement" model detailed in a November 2025 consultation. The changes are expected to begin in April 2026.
The restrictions pose a growing financial threat to British universities. International students from the 2021/22 intake contributed approximately £41.9 billion to the U.K. economy, according to a joint report by the Higher Education Policy Institute, Universities U.K. International and Kaplan International Pathways.
International fee income accounts for roughly 23% of total university revenue, according to the Higher Education Statistics Agency, effectively subsidizing domestic students whose tuition is capped at £9,535 per year.