International Roundup
The
Belgian Senate has voted to give regional-level voting rights to non-European
immigrants. The bill passed with a
vote of 41 to 29. The bill allows
non-European immigrants in Belgium to register in communal elections if they
have lived in Belgium for at least five consecutive years.
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In
July of this year, British Home Secretary David Blunkett announced new rules for
student visas. Foreign students who
returned to schools in September had to complete new applications to extend
their visas and send their passports to offices throughout Britain for
processing. The students were
promised that 70% of the applications would be processed within three weeks and
all applications would be processed within thirteen weeks.
However,
delays in processing and the misplacement of several passports by the British
Home Office may leave foreign students at British boarding schools trapped in
Great Britain for Christmas.
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A
new immigration law in Spain will make it easier to deport illegal immigrants.
The new law, which came into effect this month, will also require anyone
entering Spain from a non-European Union country, especially Morocco, to apply
for a visa before they arrive.
More
than 100 illegal immigrants have been killed in 2003 trying to reach Spanish
shores and according to official figures, between January and November, almost
18,000 illegal immigrants were detained before reaching Spanish land.
Many of these illegal immigrants come from Morocco.
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Justice
Ministry officials in Japan have announced that the government will tighten visa
requirements for foreign students for the next academic year due to the number
of crimes allegedly committed by students who overstayed their visas.
The new requirements will apply to universities and Japanese language
schools, where it has been discovered that many students have overstayed their
visas, as well as to prospective students from countries with a record of
overstaying problems, particularly China.
The new measures will also assess the credibility of language proficiency certificates submitted to Japanese schools by the student’s home institutions, and may blacklist those schools that issue certificates to students who lack the proper Japanese language skills. Officials say that these steps are aimed at ensuring that the students have sufficient funds to live in Japan, and that the primary purpose of their stay is to study.
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