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On the Problem of Immigration Intermediary ..

I live in Australia now, I hope the information I provide can help you ~ ~

Farmers, western pastry chefs and technicians are really in short supply in Australia. The immigrants provided by this intermediary are skilled immigrants. If you meet the conditions set by him, it is not impossible to immigrate, but it is said that you must have an employer's guarantee to apply for a green card after one year.

For example:

Western pastry chef:

▲ Have a certificate of domestic Western pastry chef;

▲ It is best to work in a bakery in a four-star hotel in China, with 4-5 years working experience;

▲ There are no English and academic requirements.

If you meet the above conditions, the intermediary can help you get a visa, you can take your family to Australia, your spouse can work freely without restrictions, and your children can enjoy the treatment of local residents (free public business education).

But the agent doesn't guarantee where you can find a job. He is only responsible for sending you there. A year later, if you can't find a job, or find a job, but your employer doesn't vouch for you, your whole family will be deported again and you won't get a green card, which is a waste of time.

If the intermediary has a channel to ensure that an employer will ask you to work there (be taxed) and then help your employer sponsor immigration, that's fine.

So choose a reliable intermediary, because the employer guarantees a lot of deception, for the following reasons:

Some employers in Australia use this method to trick some people who want to immigrate to Australia and help them work at low prices (you can only help him because he applied for it). A year later, he said to you: I'm sorry, your immigration can't be handled for some reason, so you have to go back to China. But he didn't lose anything, and he made you a cheap worker for a year in vain.

Not alarmist. Some friends around me are spending this visa here now. His employers push and shove, and immigrants don't give them. Their whole family is here, and her husband has been working for that boss (the labor force is super cheap). Immigration has sent a letter asking them to go back. They are still looking for a lawyer to sue the employer, but the lawyer said it was useless, because on the surface, he didn't lie to you. He applied for you in the name of work, and you did get a work visa. I've been working for a year, and he pays you, but it's none of his business to immigrate in the end.

So many intermediaries may have the same problem, but some of them really help you seriously, so you should ask clearly ~ ~ ~