Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Some questions about my brother going to Norway. Thank you for your

Some questions about my brother going to Norway. Thank you for your

Ok, I won't answer the first 1, 2, 3 questions. Because these can be found out, for example, the exchange rate can be found on the foreign exchange quotation sheet of the Bank of China. However, personally, there is little difference between Bergen and Oslo University, and there is no first and second. On the contrary, several universities in Bergen are world-famous, such as NHH University. Your brother is an undergraduate, so learning a language will be faster if he has less contact with his mother tongue. More people in China may take care of it, but it may also have the opposite effect. See for yourself.

Fourthly, I think it is too early for you to consider whether your brother will live and develop in Norway. The undergraduate course takes at least three years, which is very variable. Maybe when I meet a better opportunity, I will go to other countries for further study. If he can study and live in Norway by himself, why must he go to a country with relatives? Wouldn't it be better to have a broader future?

Fifth, second-hand cars or third-hand cars can be used, but is it cost-effective to pay for road maintenance, insurance, gasoline and parking for one year? . Besides, Bergen is so small, is there a parking space for students in the school? I think even in Oslo University, students' parking spaces will be restricted, let alone in Bergen University. Parking spaces are generally reserved for students who live far away, such as students who need to drive 1 hour into the city every day in other towns. Generally, if you can take a bus for 20 to 30 minutes, there will be no parking space. I don't think your brother can live in a small town far from Bergen. You'd better ask your brother if there is a parking space at school before you consider buying a car.

Sixth, wait for your brother to tell you his experience slowly. :)

Seventh, if your brother finds a permanent job, the Immigration Bureau can approve him to stay, and he can get a Norwegian passport seven years from the day he gets a work visa. If he marries a Norwegian woman, he can also apply for changing from a student visa to a family reunion visa, but only if the woman's annual salary is 220,000.

Eighth, this article can definitely answer you that even if your brother gets permanent residency in Norway, it is impossible for your parents to immigrate to Norway with him. At least in today's immigration law, your parents are not qualified. What will happen in three or seven years? I don't know. According to the current immigration law, if the applicant (your parents) has no other relatives (including husband and wife, parents, children, brothers and sisters) in his own country (China) or other developed countries, he can apply for family reunion with his relatives (children, parents) in Norway and move to Norway. I know a person who has applied for mother reunion for more than ten years. I don't know how much the lawyer's fee cost, or I was rejected again and again. Even though his parents have been divorced for many years, the Norwegian government still refuses to let his mother reunite with him on the grounds that his father is still alive and can take care of his mother in China. He told me the above paragraph about Norwegian immigration law, which was clearly written in his visa refusal application. Besides your brother, you are also in your family, so it is almost impossible to get through this.

Good luck!