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SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS729
ENT11
SUN · 2026-05-31 · 14:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0531-80654
News/Indian man awarded almost £30,000 after UK employer failed t…
NSR-2026-0531-80654News Report·EN·Social Justice

Indian man awarded almost £30,000 after UK employer failed to provide work

An Indian citizen, Shabin Shaji, has been awarded nearly £30,000 by a UK employment tribunal after his sponsoring employer, Swan Care Solutions Ltd, failed to provide him with any work for a year after his arrival in the UK in 2023. Shaji, who came to the UK to work as a care worker, was unable to work for other employers due to visa restrictions.

Chris Osuh Community affairs correspondentThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-31 · 14:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Indian man awarded almost £30,000 after UK employer failed to provide work
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
729words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
11entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

An Indian citizen, Shabin Shaji, has been awarded nearly £30,000 by a UK employment tribunal after his sponsoring employer, Swan Care Solutions Ltd, failed to provide him with any work for a year after his arrival in the UK in 2023. Shaji, who came to the UK to work as a care worker, was unable to work for other employers due to visa restrictions. The tribunal ordered the company to pay him wages for work he was ready and willing to do, along with other costs. Shaji experienced destitution and relied on charity during this period. The company's license to sponsor workers was later revoked.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 11
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Social Justice
Human Interest
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Swan Care Solutions was ordered to pay £28,843.54 in wages and holiday pay, plus costs of £8,700.

factualemployment tribunal
Confidence
1.00
02

An Indian citizen was awarded nearly £30,000 after his UK employer failed to provide him with work for a year.

factual
Confidence
1.00
03

Shabin Shaji paid £17,000 to agents connected by a YouTube influencer before securing a role with Swan Care Solutions.

factualShabin Shaji
Confidence
0.90
04

Thousands of people have paid recruiters and arrived in the UK only to be 'ghosted' by employers.

factualWork Rights Centre
Confidence
0.80
05

The skilled worker visa must be reformed to make it easier for migrants to change employers when contracts are breached.

predictionDora-Olivia Vicol
Confidence
0.70
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 729 words
An Indian citizen who came to the UK to work as a care worker through the post-Brexit visa scheme has been awarded nearly £30,000 in a landmark case, because his employer failed to give him a single day of work for a year.An employment tribunal ordered the care company Swan Care Solutions Ltd to pay Shabin Shaji wages for the work he was “ready, able and willing to do”.Believing there was a “major shortage” of healthcare workers in the UK, Shaji emigrated from Kerala to Stafford, England, bought a car for the job and undertook online training in 2023.He told the tribunal that before arriving in the UK, he had sought advice from a YouTube influencer on securing work in the UK.She connected him with agents whom he paid £17,000, before he was interviewed for a role at Swan Care Solutions on WhatsApp, the tribunal heard.Shaji was then given a certificate of sponsorship, entitling him to live and work in the UK with Swan Care Solutions as his Home Office-approved sponsoring employer.But the computer science graduate, who had previously worked in healthcare in India, ended up in destitution after his Staffordshire-based employer did not give him any shifts, despite his repeated pleas.His sponsored visa prevented him from working for anyone else for more than 20 hours a week. He eventually managed to secure sponsorship from another employer in April 2024 – a year after his arrival in the UK – but he later returned to India in ill health.The 33-year-old won his pay claim after seeking help from the employment justice charity Work Rights Centre, which said “thousands of people” had paid money to recruiters, “only to arrive in the UK to be ghosted”.Dora-Olivia Vicol, the charity’s chief executive, added: “We’ve seen case after case of migrant care workers sold a dream in Britain, leaving their careers and families behind, only to find destitution and abandonment by their employer and the state.“The skilled worker visa must be entirely reformed to make it easier to change employers when rights or contracts are breached.”The tribunal heard that Swan Care Solutions’ staff suggested Shaji take cash-in-hand jobs and use a food bank when he said he was struggling, telling him they would be in touch when it was his “turn”.At a hearing in May the company was ordered to pay £8,700 in costs – on top of the £28,843.54 it was ordered to pay him in wages and holiday pay, plus remedy for failure to provide him with a written contract and non-compliance with grievance procedures.At a hearing in Birmingham earlier this year, the employment judge Kate Edmonds said: “The claimant had done what needed to be done to start work … He was now in the country, with the right permissions, and living in the right location. However, the respondent did not provide him with work, nor did they pay him.“What in effect the respondent was doing, was treating the claimant as a zero-hours worker … The problem, of course, was that the claimant was not a zero-hours worker.“The respondent withheld work from him … There was therefore an unauthorised deduction from his wages.”Shaji said: “I was broke and had to rely on charity. I drank tap water and bought bread close to its expiration date to survive [and] looked around local shops in Stafford for free bananas and bread for those who were struggling.“I attended church and on Sundays after worship, the good people who attend the worship shared with me some snacks with tea, for which I am very grateful.”He added: “I thought it would be a great opportunity, but when I came to the UK I found immigrants and British people struggling. I was in a terrible situation, feeling like no one in authority cared if I lived or died.”He told the hearing that Swan Care Solutions’ actions had “serious long-term detrimental effects on my personal and family finances”.Judge Edmonds said while it was “not entirely clear” how Shaji initially came to be in contact with Swan Care Solutions, it was clear he “was in touch with individuals with whom he appears to have transferred some money”.The judge added that Swan Care Solutions’ licence to issue certificates of sponsorship had been “ultimately revoked” in 2024, in part because it did not pay workers until training had been completed.Swan Care Solutions did not respond to a request for comment.
§ 05

Entities

11 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
care worker visa
1.00
employment tribunal
0.90
migrant worker exploitation
0.90
post-brexit visa scheme
0.80
failure to provide work
0.80
skilled worker visa reform
0.70
recruitment fraud
0.60
sponsored visa
0.50
work rights centre
0.50
swan care solutions
0.50
§ 07

Topic connections

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