The Home Office has been threatened with legal action amid claims it made wh

游客2023-11-13  14

问题     The Home Office has been threatened with legal action amid claims it made which mistakenly implied that 22 colleges were bogus or sub-standard.
    English UK, an association representing more than 450 language colleges, said the alleged error could bankrupt the institutions. Its lawyers are demanding senior Home Office officials issue an immediate apology and retraction.
    Last week, the Home Office said scores of colleges had lost their right to recruit overseas students because they could not meet the standards of a new inspection regime or had not applied to be on a compulsory register of institutions authorised to enrol overseas students.
    Damian Green, the immigration minister, warned that "widespread abuse of the student visa system has gone on for too long". Too many students had come to the UK to find paid work and bring over their family, rather than to study, he said.
    English UK said its colleges had not signed up for the register because their courses lasted less than a year. Only institutions that offer courses that last a year or more have to be on the register.
    The association said institutions had decided not to voluntarily apply to be on the register because it would have been expensive.
    Tony Millns, chief executive of English UK, said the Home Office had "allowed it to be inferred that all the colleges on its list were bogus, fronts for illegal immigration, or of poor educational quality."
    "This has been enormously damaging to the reputation of perfectly legitimate and high-quality businesses", he said.
    A letter sent by English UK’s lawyers to the Home Office states the government published information that was "untrue, defamatory and gravely damaging to colleges’ goodwill and reputations".
    "The potential damage is potentially substantial, irreparable and unquantifiable," it said.
    The Home Office wants to curb overseas student number to reduce total net migration to Britain by 230,000 between now and 2015. A spokesman for the UK Border Agency said senior officials would not be making an apology or retracting their statement. Ministers had made it clear that colleges not on the register were not necessarily those with poor educational standards, he said.
    "Some simply failed to submit an application to demonstrate they meet our new higher standards," he said. "Widespread abuse of the student visa system has gone on for too long which is why we’ve made changes to ensure only first-class education providers should be given licences to sponsor international students."
                                              From The Guardian, November 8, 2011 [br] According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT correct?

选项 A、All the colleges on the list of English UK were of poor educational quality.
B、The Home Office wants to control the overseas student number to the UK.
C、There are new standards to be on the register that are higher than before.
D、First-class education providers can get licences to sponsor foreign students.

答案 A

解析 本题为概括题。根据倒数第二段“colleges not on the register were not necessarily those with poor educational standards”可知A错误;根据倒数第二段“The Home Office wants to curb overseas student number to reduce total net migration to Britain”可知B正确;根据最后一段“to demonstrate they meet our new higher standards”可知C正确;根据最后一段“to ensure only first-class education providers should be given licences to sponsor international students”可知D正确。故选A。
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