An Indian-origin woman living in UK has been accused of selling illegal UK work visas to migrants for as little as £12,000, according to an undercover investigation that uncovered a growing black market operating openly on Facebook.Komal Shinde runs Krishiv Consultancy Ltd, which allegedly offered bogus skilled worker visas using fake jobs, forged documents and sham payroll records to help migrants stay in the UK illegally. She is said to be operating without any official registration or legal authority, reports the Daily Mail.The investigation found that unregulated fixers are advertising visa services on Facebook Marketplace, promising “high success approval rates” while charging migrants tens of thousands of pounds. These schemes allow migrants to enter or remain in the UK through legitimate visa routes without doing the jobs they are sponsored for.In a meeting with undercover reporters, Shinde claimed she herself is in the UK on a student visa and then went on to expose herself, saying she offered skilled worker visas for roles in restaurants, care homes and warehouses across the country. She quoted prices ranging from £12,000 to £19,000.“Without job it will cost you £12,000, £13,000 or £14,000,” she said, apparently bargaining from her end. Shinde said that job and jobless visas differ in prices: “If you go with job then it will cost £17,000, £18,000 or £19,000… Just decide whether you want to go with a job or without.”In many cases migrants were told they would not need to work at all. Instead, employers would transfer a monthly salary into their bank accounts, only for the money to be returned immediately in cash. This fake payroll cycle was designed to deceive the Home Office into believing the job was genuine due to the receipts and formalities.Shinde said she took a £1,000 cut for arranging the visas, with the rest of the money going to sponsoring employers. She warned that discretion was essential in case anything “leaked”.She also offered to arrange Global Talent visas, which are meant for people with exceptional ability in fields such as science, technology or the arts. The price for this route was up to £30,000.“You have a unique skill… they create certificates for all your talents, and they create experience letters for you — all of it is genuine,” she told the Daily Mail reporter.Shinde claimed that “7 to 8” previous applications had been successful and said applicants could also be coached for Home Office interviews. She said: “Most probably we will try that you don’t have to give the interview.”The Home Office said it has launched an investigation and warned that offenders would face the “full force of the law”.Shinde has denied allegations of her selling visas or taking any cut: “I’m not fixing anything. I’m just giving the contact to the person who’s selling. That’s it.”Meta said it had removed content linked to the investigation and taken action against accounts violating its policies.
