India, China, Nigeria, Ghana top missing student cases in Canada.

A recent report has revealed that nearly 50,000 foreign students failed to enroll in their designated institutions after arriving in Canada, raising concerns about visa fraud and potential exploitation of the country’s immigration system.

According to data sourced from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) in the Globe and Mail, Indian students accounted for the largest share of untracked cases, with 19,582 failing to enroll. China followed with 4,279 students, while 3,902 Nigerian and 2,712 Ghanaian students were also recorded as missing from their institutions.

These figures, covering arrivals between March and April last year, represent 6.9 percent of the 717,539 international students monitored at the time. While 89.8 percent of students were confirmed to be compliant, the status of 23,514 remained unrecorded.

Concerns over visa fraud have intensified, as reports suggest some students were misled by fraudulent institutions, while others may have exploited Canada’s lenient reporting system to enter the country under the guise of education. A Times of India report highlighted the case of a 24-year-old Indian student who travelled to Canada believing he had been admitted to a university in Brampton, only to find that the institution was a small office with no classrooms. With no school to attend, he resorted to working at a gas station to survive.

Similarly, some students admitted to enrolling in low-cost community colleges solely to work in Canada.

“Many people from my region have done the same, so I followed suit. I know it’s illegal, but this was my only way in,” a 27-year-old from Gujarat told The Times of India.

Credit: Graphic online

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