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UAE visa changes: Five-year student visas can re-energise jobs market

'Decision will encourage students to stay in the country to seek employment here', says American University of Sharjah chancellor.

A new five-year visa that will allow students to stay in the country to look for work after they graduate will re-energise the UAE's job market, university deans and students said.

Expat and international students will no longer be expected to leave soon after they receive their degree.

Until now they have also been made to renew their visa every year of their degree.

Major changes to the way expats are employed, their legal residency status and the ability for foreign companies to be owned without a local partner were outlined on Sunday night.

“This is a long time coming and people have been interested in this for years. Many students are here as they want to work here," said Dr Warren Fox, head of higher education at Dubai's education regulator, the Knowledge and Human Development Authority.

“Formerly, a young man who graduated would be unable to stay in the country unless he had a job or went for higher studies. Now, the expatriates who are born and raised here would not need to stay here on their family’s visa or to look for a job."

The move will create new opportunities and develop human capital," he said.

"All of these are a step forward in the right direction. We are already a very popular international higher-education hub and visas are always an issue for students. This flexibility will strengthen our position."

Dr Fox anticipates "higher interest in applications" to the UAE's universities.

"There will be high interest in staying in Dubai after they graduate. These talented students who are new graduates and ready to go, can add to the economy,” believes Dr Fox.

The KHDA said that although the full details have not been disclosed, students can expect that if they enrol for a three-year course, they would still have a five-year visa.

“The students could stay and look for professional opportunities, they could be innovators or start new jobs or set up a start-up. Rather than a couple of months, they get extended time to look at these options.”

Dr Björn Kjerfve, Chancellor of American University of Sharjah, one of the country's best-known universities abroad, said the prospect of a five-year visa would not only attract international investors and qualified professionals but also help shape a better future for expatriate students in UAE.

"We join the students and their parents in highly appreciating the decision to extend visa renewal for students for five years," he said.

"The decision will have a great impact on the future of expatriate students and encourage them to stay in the country to seek employment here. This will reinforce the country’s interest in the strategic investment in knowledge and future generations.”

Ayesha Burney, a 21-year-old Pakistani student who has just completed her bachelor in International Studies at AUS, said students feel like they are on a countdown as soon as they graduate.

“I haven’t been able to look for jobs over here just because my visa was expiring," she said.

She is already returning to Oman, where her family live, having struggled to find an internship that provides a visa.

Filing paperwork for the visa every year is also a time-consuming process.

“Definitely anywhere in the Middle East, this has been a huge issue for the expat community. For UAE, this is a welcome change and a long time coming. We would love to study and find jobs here,” she said.

The expatriate will soon be heading to Oman where her parents stay and will resume her job-hunt in UAE from there.

Another student at the American University of Sharjah, Alejandra O’Connor, said getting a five-year visa will make things much easier.

“I will be able to have time to stay and find a job in the UAE,” said the 21-year-old public relations student from Bolivia.

Source: https://www.thenational.ae/uae/education/uae-visa-changes-five-year-student-visas-can-re-energise-jobs-market-1.732747