What do I need to do to get a Thai to Australia.
What do I need to do to get a Thai to Australia.
A goodly dose of morphine...
A lot of money helps and a good reason for them to return.
Bit more info needed.
Get her/ him on the boat.
Don't do it, they will not like the food.
I met lots of Thais living in Australia when I went on holiday there, also there were numerous Thai restaurants.
Try here. Visas and migration - Australian EmbassyOriginally Posted by Mozzbie47
In my local Bunnings store there was a young Thai girl working the till. She spoke good English, was very happy doing her job and was a breath of fresh Air.
Easy on the Eye as well.
She would of been earning good money, getting Superannuation, sick leave and all the benefits afforded to workers in Australia.
No wonder she was Happy.
Not all Thais Adapt to Australia though.
Be foolish to think they do.
The OP doesn't say enough to be able to advise much on his question. Are we talking someone who he's only ever chatted to on the internet or someone who he's been in a genuine relationship with for some time?. Are we talking about a settlement visa of some description, or a tourist visa?.
I've taken my girl to Oz 5 or 6 times for a month each visit, she absolutely loves it but living down there might be a whole different ball game. Getting her 1 year multi-entry tourist visas has never been a problem, but it's been a long term legitimate relationship and we have all the documents needed to back that up.
From a Sydney Morning Herald article
Ask any Thai living in Sydney where to find fresh ingredients needed for Thai cuisine, and they will point you in the direction of Campbell Street, not far from the Central railway station. Campbell Street s so dominated by Thai businesses that it goes by the nickname Thai Town. Copies of the Bangkok Post and Thai-language newspapers and magazines can be bought in any one of the half dozen Thai grocers that stretch the length of the street.
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The number of Australian citizens of Thai descent have more than tripled in the last two decades. The latest census, held in 2011, said there were 45,465 Thai-born people in Australia, with tens of thousands more in the country as temporary students or Australian-born of Thai descent. It's estimated there are as many as 100,000 people of Thai descent living in Sydney, making it by far the largest concentration in Australia.
To help foster a broader sense of community in the city, the Thai consulate organises a ceremony and invites popular Thai-based singers to put on a concert every year. Local bars and pubs feature live Thai rock and pop bands on Sunday nights for a predominantly twenty-something Thai audience. One man working at a mobile phone business on Campbell Street proudly advertised that his was the only store in Australia run solely by Thais and operating for a Thai customer base.
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''There's a little part of Thailand right here in Sydney,'' Amy Chanta tells me. She should know. The owner of six successful Thai restaurants, Amy has lived in Sydney for more than three decades and was a pioneer in the city's Thai food scene.
Besides supporting a family and developing six successful restaurants over the past 23 years, Amy is the publisher and owner of a free local Thai-language community newspaper called Thai Press, and runs a website (natui.com.au) catering to Thais looking for work and accommodation in Sydney.
There are 60,000 registered members of the website which gets over 10,000 visits per day. Amy says she started the website for Thais trying to make it in Sydney and provide support mechanisms that didn't exist when she first arrived in the early 1980s. Her family also runs a travel agency for people looking to travel to and from Thailand.
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