Call London +44(0)344-991-9222. ![]() The world’s most popular immigration advice site ● 32 Years in Business ● Established in 1988 Immigration newsletter 18 December 2012 Canada will launch the new Canadian Federal Skilled Trades Program or FSTP on January 2nd 2013. The FSTP will allow skilled tradespeople to apply for Canadian permanent resident status if they have a job offer in Canada, speak adequate English and have two years’ experience in a skilled trade. 3,000 applications will be accepted in the first year.
The latest UK census, completed in 2011, shows that the number of foreign-born people living in England and Wales rose by about two thirds in the decade to 2011. There are now 7.5m foreign born people in England and Wales; about 13% of the total population. The highest number of immigrants came from India, Poland and Pakistan. The UK Home Secretary, Theresa May, has announced that, from April next year, the UK Border Agency will interview over 100,000 people a year who have applied for UK Tier 4 student visas. Canada will soon require people from 29 countries and the Palestinian Territory to provide biometric information with their visa applications. The countries are mainly in Africa and Asia. Applicants will be required to submit a photograph and have their photographs taken; these will be kept on a database. The system will come into operation in 2013. Immigration is changing the racial makeup of the United States. 17% of American citizens are of Hispanic descent. Most of these are from Mexico and many are either immigrants or the children of immigrants. A further 5%, about 15,000,000 people, is of Asian descent. The former US president George W Bush has told a Washington audience that immigrants can help America 'build a better tomorrow'. Mr Bush was a Republican president of the US between 2000 and 2008. Since then, the Republicans are seen as having become ‘anti-immigrant. The UK's chief inspector of immigration has told MPs that the UK Border Agency (UKBA) provides 'shockingly poor' customer service. John Vine also told the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee that the agency had failed to deal properly with a huge backlog of asylum cases. CONNECT WITH US: |