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The work certificate of studying and working in Australia cannot be forged.

The work certificate of studying and working in Australia cannot be forged. It is reported that hundreds of Indian students have been exposed to pay a large sum of money to a criminal group to buy forged work experience and recommendation materials in order to obtain permanent residence visas in Australia.

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This scam mainly involves restaurants and small business owners. Investigators said that this is an organized and profitable criminal business and a "moth" of Australia's immigration policy.

In the case of the Immigration Review Arbitration Tribunal, many such fraudulent acts of forging documents were exposed. Some students paid 3500 yuan to buy forged documents, and their visas were eventually cancelled.

"One of the Indian students gave the criminal 3,500 yuan to gain working experience as a chef, and another student gave a chef 2,500 yuan to get a work certificate and photos of him working in a restaurant."

These international students who bought work experience said that in order to immigrate, they had to work in restaurants, bakeries, mechanical repair shops and barber shops for more than 900 hours without pay. These work experiences can provide them with half of the points required for immigration.

The arbitral tribunal was informed that 15 international students complained about false accusations last year, and several Indian immigration agents issued false chef courses, saying that this was a shortcut to immigrate to Australia.

Although most of the above cases occurred in Melbourne, they are common in Australia. According to the Australian Immigration Department, five people used forged work certificates to call themselves chefs or western chefs, but after investigation, the Immigration Department found that they were only taxi drivers, security guards and cashiers.

Carmine Amarante, the key figure in the above case, works at Della International Training School in Melbourne. He was jailed for 3 years for defrauding 2 million yuan.

He helped 47 1 visa applicants forge 54 1 documents, each international student paid 1, 500-2,500 yuan in cash, and small businessmen who were willing to issue relevant certificates got a 300-500 yuan rebate.

Since the discovery of this fake den, which has been operating continuously for five years, the Immigration Bureau has been working hard to cancel the visas of the above students. Last month, an Indian citizen used forged documents, and he finally lost the case in the federal magistrate's court.

In May, Rajinder Singh, an Indian student, appeared in the arbitration tribunal for immigration review and admitted to buying a forged work certificate.