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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> CT & Others (Highly skilled migrant – student switching) No Country [2006] UKAIT 00095 (06 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2006/00095.html Cite as: [2006] UKAIT 95, [2006] UKAIT 00095 |
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CT & Others (Highly skilled migrant – student switching) No Country [2006] UKAIT 00095
ASYLUM AND IMMIGRATION TRIBUNAL
Date of hearing: 22 August 2006
Date Determination notified: 06 December 2006
Before
Senior Immigration Judge Gill
Between
CT & Others | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
DETERMINATION AND REASONS
The purpose of the Highly Skilled Migrants Programme is to enable migration, and it is not contrary to the purpose of the relevant Rules to interpret the switching rules (paragraphs 135DA-135DG) restrictively. A person cannot meet the requirements of paragraph 135DB unless his current leave was granted in accordance with the requirements of paragraphs 57-62: it is not sufficient to have merely leave "as a student". In that context, it is clear that the reference to a degree in paragraph 135DB(ii) is reference to a degree obtained during the current period of leave in the United Kingdom, thus excluding those who have leave under paragraphs 57-62 for courses below degree level.
"Requirements for leave to enter the United Kingdom as a highly skilled migrant135A. The requirements to be met by a person seeking leave to enter as a highly skilled migrant are that the applicant:
(i) must produce a valid document issued by the Home Office confirmed that he meets, at the time of the issue of that document, the criteria specified by the Secretary of State for entry to the United Kingdom under the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme; and(ii) intends to make the United Kingdom his main home; and(iii) is able to maintain and accommodate himself and any dependants adequately without recourse to public funds; and(iv) holds a valid United Kingdom entry clearance for entry in this capacity."
"135DB. The requirements for an extension of stay as a highly skilled migrant in the case of a person who has leave to remain as a student are that the applicant:
(i) entered the United Kingdom or was given leave to remain as a student in accordance with paragraphs 57 to 62 of these Rules; and
(ii) has obtained a degree qualification on a recognised degree course at either a United Kingdom publicly funded further or higher education institution or a bona fide United Kingdom private education institution which maintains satisfactory records of enrolment and attendance; and
(iii) has the written consent of his official sponsor to remain as a highly skilled migrant if he is a member of a government or international scholarship agency sponsorship and that sponsorship is either ongoing or has recently come to an end at the time of the requested extension; and
(iv) meets the requirements of paragraph 135A(i)-(iii)."
It is at this point that the appellant and the respondent disagree. The disagreement relates to the precise meaning of sub-paragraph 135DB(ii). The appellant says that he meets the requirements of that paragraph, because of his postgraduate degree from Sussex, obtained many years ago. The respondent argues that that sub-paragraph requires the degree in question to have been obtained during the very student leave which is now to be varied. The appellant responds that that interpretation is demanded neither by the wording of the Rules nor by common sense, because it excludes from consideration a person such as himself who is more highly skilled than a new graduate would be.
"16. I can see no logical basis for the stipulating in paragraph 135DB that switching in the case of students is only open to those who have a British degree, irrespective of when it was obtained. To permit switching in the case of a student who has acquired a British degree at some point in the past, but to deny that possibility to a student whose degree had been obtained abroad would make no sense. To distinguish between students on that basis would be irrational. It is all the more irrational given that eligibility for the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme does not depend on the applicant having a British degree, or indeed any degree at all.17. To allow students who have obtained a degree during the period of their current period of leave to switch to highly skilled migrant status is more readily understandable, because to except them from the need to return to their own countries is likely to ensure that their skills are not lost to the United Kingdom.
18. Adopting a purposive approach to the interpretation of paragraph 135DB, I am in no doubt that the Respondent's construction is the correct one and I must therefore dismiss the Appellant's appeal in respect of the Immigration Rules."
"(i) entered the United Kingdom or was given leave to remain as a student in accordance with paragraphs 57 to 62 of these Rules".
Not all those who have leave as student are able potentially to meet the requirements of paragraph 135DB: they can do so only if their leave was granted under the requirements of paragraphs 57 to 62.
"The Programme is designed to allow highly skilled people to migrate to the United Kingdom to look for work or self-employment opportunities."
Other guidance, in chapter 5, section 11 of the Immigration Directorates' Instructions indicate that:-
"In general, those seeking to remain in the UK as a highly skilled migrant should have obtained the correct entry clearance before travelling to the UK. However, the Immigration Rules specify a limited number of categories (listed below) from which individuals may apply to switch into leave as a highly skilled migrant."
"Where an application to switch into leave as a highly skilled migrant does not meet the requirements of the Immigration Rules because the applicant does not have leave in a relevant category, the presumption is that the application should be refused on the basis that there is no provision for the applicant to switch.
However, as with all cases, caseworkers may grant leave outside the Immigration Rules but only in compelling personal circumstances. Circumstances will be assessed by caseworkers on a case by case discretionary basis.
For the purposes of such an assessment, compelling personal circumstances are defined as 'circumstances relating to the individual (rather than the employment) where it is considered unduly harsh to expect the individual to leave the UK and apply for entry clearance in their own country'.
Whilst treating each case on its merits, not all circumstances that relate to the individual will be deemed unduly harsh and therefore compelling. Examples of such circumstances and which would not be deemed compelling include:
…
Humanitarian grounds. If there are humanitarian concerns involved, it is open to the applicant to seek leave to remain in the UK in other more appropriate immigration categories for the purposes of HSMP."
C M G OCKELTON
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
Date: