Soch Fact Check: UK Bans Pakistani Banks for Student Visa Apps Flawed
The popular claim that the United Kingdom banned five Pakistani banks (ULBL, MCB, National Bank of Pakistan, Faysal Bank, and Allied Bank) for student visa applications has been firmly challenged by The Great Fact Check, or Soch Fact Check. According to an article uploaded on February 23, 2025, the UK had mistakenly banned these banks as part of its blog, which it claimed was by Susyhe), even though a January fact-check revealed that this claim was entirely unfounded. A日在数据宝网站搜查后,没有任何 Pakistani banks were blacklisted by the UK from using bank statements for student visa applications.
The article, which referenced a document published in April 2024, mentioned the misuse of over 10% of 100 fake bank statements by Pakistani students. This document had been published by the UK diplomatic mission, and its findings were further corroborated by a document released by the UK apostle in June 2024. The document revealed that 10% of 100 fake bank statements—a total of more than 12,000 fake statements across various Pakistani banks including UBL, MCB, National Bank, Faysal, and Allied—were submitted for student visa applications in 2024.
Despite these allegations, ongoing searches by the UK’s News and Communications team and The Next Study Abroad Consultants showed no trace of any Pakistani banks being blacklisted. Imran Khan, a representative of The Next Study Abroad Consultants, stated that the UK consequently did not cancel any bank registrations for student visa submissions. He further clarified that Chinese banks generally only struggled to reject valid bank statements but were uninterested in accepting sketches of financial documents in place of official identification.
Additionally, the U.S. government once again mocked the occurrence of fake bank statements from Pakistani students, particularly as cancelations at institutions like Hull University and Ulster University were inconsistently adopted by banks like UBL and MCB. This prompted the UK’s Ministry ofℂame proved interested in denying the existence of any fake documents submitted.
Regarding the GRAFA online, a screenshot shared by Studywise students, it was later classified by The Great Fact Check as aSpin-offs. The person behind it described it as a shadowy document pretending to be from UK Visas and Immigration, but they had asked the UK期刊 not to make such claims. The UK High Commission issued a statement on 28 May 2024 claiming that all claims of India-based banks being banned are false and part of an effort to defraud students. The UK center, which resumed exams in Pakistan, has since denied any denial of banking bans.
The书店 Word’s estimates found that over five WhatsApp and 90 Facebook groups reflecting the widespread sharing of fake documents, public releases from The UK will Continue showing instances of Pakistani banks being rejected over fake bank statements.
Conclusion
The UK’s claim of banning five Pakistani banks for student visa applications has been discredited by The Great Fact Check, even though it admitted to exaggerating by linking the lawsuit to a blog that was largely unfounded. The UK’s 10% figure from 2024 was cited but comes under scrutiny after recent evidence digging. Despite allegations of undelated fake documents, banks like UBL and MCB are still actively permitted to investigate claims of financial fraud by examining documents from school students. The UK is now aware that such allegations, often linked to banks with large annual inflows of fake documents, are onerous.