An overhaul of British immigration rules could end the traditional entry and settlement rights of Commonwealth citizens with British relatives, a newspaper said Wednesday.
The Times daily said that Britain's new points-based immigration system could end a scheme whereby Commonwealth citizens with a British grandparent are allowed to enter and settle in Britain.
People from Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Canada and Zimbabwe are the most likely to be affected.
Immigration is a hot topic in Britain, with tabloid newspapers regularly labelling the government's immigration and asylum policy "chaos".
Under the "ancestral visa" scheme, people who can prove one of their grandparents was born in Britain are allowed to enter.
They must be prepared to work and not rely on the state, but after four years can apply for permanent settlement.
Sixty thousand people have entered Britain under the scheme in the past five years, with more than 10,000 being allowed to settle in 2003 and 2004.
A Home Office spokeswoman told The Times that no decision had been taken on the scheme's future. "We are consulting on the new points system for managed migration to cover routes to work, study and train in the UK," she said.
The points-based immigration system is designed to select migrants with in-demand skills in shortage in the existing workforce, while closing the door on unskilled workers from outside the European Union.
Statistics released Thursday showed that foreign immigration to Britain surged to a record 494,100 high last year.
The figures showed that migration from Australia, South Africa, New Zealand and Canada, the "Old Commonwealth", soared.
Both Prime Minister Tony Blair's governing Labour Party and the main opposition Conservatives campaigned on a hard-line approach to immigration and asylum in May's general election, amid claims the system was being abused.
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