Immigrants Will Have To Speak English To Live In Britain, High Court Rules

English Test For Immigrants Upheld By High Court

A High Court judge has dismissed a legal challenge to a new immigration rule requiring people to be able to speak English before coming to the UK to live with their spouse.

Mr Justice Beatson said the new "pre-entry" English language test announced by Home Secretary Theresa May in June 2010 did not interfere with the human rights of three couples who brought the challenge.

In his judgment, handed down at the High Court in Birmingham, Mr Justice Beatson said the new requirement was not a disproportionate interference with family life.

The claimants' lawyers launched the judicial review in the High Court, arguing that the rule contravened the right to a family life and the right to marry under the European Convention on Human Rights.

British citizen Rashida Chapti, 54, and her 57-year-old husband Vali Chapti were one of three named claimants in the case.

The couple have been married for 37 years and have six children together but Mr Chapti, an Indian national who does not speak, read or write English, cannot move to the UK under the new immigration rule.

The challenge to the rule also claimed the language requirement was unlawful and constituted discrimination on the grounds of race and nationality.

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