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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 11:01 pm Post subject: Irish passport, but living in SA. What to do about CBC |
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I have a really complicated situation and I dont know what to do.
Every time I apply for jobs I am told that I have to apply from my 'home country.'
What would be my 'home' country?
Irish passport (but never lived in Ireland, I got the passport through my granddad)
Lived and grew up in England (but I was never 'naturalised')
I now live in South Africa (for one year) and am marrying my South African fiance.(I also did my degree in South Africa in 2006)
Where do I need to go to apply? Do I have to leave my husband and fly to England/Ireland to apply?
Which criminal background check do I need?
When i contact the South Korean embassy in South Africa they say I can apply from here but recruiters keep saying that the embassy here is different to the consulate in South Korea.
Also, can my husband get a visa with a Bachelor of Technology?
Last edited by Justine on Tue Aug 24, 2010 4:43 am; edited 2 times in total |
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ttompatz

Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Location: Kwangju, South Korea
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Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 11:15 pm Post subject: Re: Please please help |
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Justine wrote: |
I have a really complicated situation and I dont know what to do.
Every time I apply for jobs I am told that I have to apply from my 'home country.'
What would be my 'home' country?
Irish passport (but never lived in Ireland, I got the passport through my granddad)
Lived and grew up in England (but I was never 'naturalised')
I now live in South Africa (for one year) and am marrying my South African fiance.(I also did my degree in South Africa in 2006)
Where do I need to go to apply? Do I have to leave my husband and fly to England/Ireland to apply?
Which criminal background check do I need?
When i contact the South Korean embassy in South Africa they say I can apply from here but recruiters keep saying that the embassy here is different to the consulate in South Korea.
Please help! |
The difficulty you are encountering is over the consular interview and CBC due to your passport/citizenship.
Because your PASSPORT is from Ireland you are required to have your consular interview in Ireland and your CBC from Ireland but with your degree being issued in S.A. you will need to have it verified and certified by the Korean consulate in S.A.
Getting here will be difficult but not impossible.
Since you are LEGALLY resident in S.A. you can do your interview there AND since your degree was issued there you can get your degree consulate certified there.
The only hitch will be getting a CBC from Ireland.
Get your documents done and scanned and your problems will disappear.
Scan of your Irish CBC with apostille,
Scan of your S.A. degree with K-consulate certification,
Scan of the information pages in your passport
resume, photo and away you go.
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mmstyle
Joined: 17 Apr 2006 Location: wherever
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Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 11:16 pm Post subject: |
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Edited:
Ttompatz beat me to the punch. Cheers TtP.
Good luck, Justine. |
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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 11:47 pm Post subject: |
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I am a temporary resident in South Africa, I havnt yet got permanent residency.
How do I find this out for deifinate? Has anyone got an email address for Immigration in Korea?
If I have to have an interview in Ireland can my husband and I still apply together even though he has to apply from South Africa?
This is so compliacted. I really can not afford to fly to Irleland for the interview.
Thanks for all of your help. |
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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 11:51 pm Post subject: |
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This is what the Korean Embassy in Ireland have said-
'In relation to your inquiry, of getting a criminal background check is you should be residing in Ireland or have resided in Ireland.
If you have never lived in Ireland then you should get your criminal background check in South Africa and UK.
But before that, please contact your employer in Korea about your situation.' |
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ttompatz

Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Location: Kwangju, South Korea
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 12:15 am Post subject: |
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Justine wrote: |
This is what the Korean Embassy in Ireland have said-
'In relation to your inquiry, of getting a criminal background check is you should be residing in Ireland or have resided in Ireland.
If you have never lived in Ireland then you should get your criminal background check in South Africa and UK.
But before that, please contact your employer in Korea about your situation.' |
Don't take my word for it then.
You can do whatever they tell you but in the end.....
Passport is from Ireland, CBC will have to be from Ireland (even if you have NEVER lived there) or K-immi in Korea will send it back.
You can try one from S.A. but don't hold your breath that anyone will accept in on it's own (from the recruiter to the employer to K-immi).
But hey, that is just my humble opinion. Feel free to ignore me. I am NOT the be-all, end all and I have been known to be wrong.
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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 12:23 am Post subject: |
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I really appreciate your opinion though.
This is on the hikorea website-
The following outlines the differences when applying for visa issuance through overseas consulate.
* By rule, must apply from the Korean consulate that is located in the applicant�s country.
※ When applying from a third country is permitted:
- Those that have worked in Korea as a Professor (E-1), Foreign language instructor (E-2), or Researcher (E-3), and have no record of law breaking
-�Those whose education level has been verified by domestic verification agency (�Korean Council for University Education�) that was created based on Law on Korean University Education Association
▶By rule, must go through an interview at the consulate. (However, those that applied for visa issuance from a third country may skip this portion as situation warrants)
- According to the standard interview manual, conduct a face-to-face interview. However, if circumstances were such that making a visit is not possible or plausible, then it may be conducted over video conference.
- If, after the interview, the applicant is deemed unfit to work as an instructor, visa will not be issued regardless of the issuance of visa issuance certificate.
So maybe I can just apply from South Africa. I just dont know how the hell to find out. |
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ttompatz

Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Location: Kwangju, South Korea
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 12:34 am Post subject: |
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Justine wrote: |
I really appreciate your opinion though.
This is on the hikorea website-
The following outlines the differences when applying for visa issuance through overseas consulate.
* By rule, must apply from the Korean consulate that is located in the applicant�s country.
※ When applying from a third country is permitted:
- Those that have worked in Korea as a Professor (E-1), Foreign language instructor (E-2), or Researcher (E-3), and have no record of law breaking
-�Those whose education level has been verified by domestic verification agency (�Korean Council for University Education�) that was created based on Law on Korean University Education Association
▶By rule, must go through an interview at the consulate. (However, those that applied for visa issuance from a third country may skip this portion as situation warrants)
- According to the standard interview manual, conduct a face-to-face interview. However, if circumstances were such that making a visit is not possible or plausible, then it may be conducted over video conference.
- If, after the interview, the applicant is deemed unfit to work as an instructor, visa will not be issued regardless of the issuance of visa issuance certificate.
So maybe I can just apply from South Africa. I just dont know how the hell to find out. |
Like I said in the 1st post:
a) Get your CBC from Ireland and get an apostille on it.
b) Then get your degree verified at the k-consulate in S.A. (as required for application after Sept 1).
c) Scan your CBC and your consulate certified copy of your degree.
d) Send that along with a scan of your passport, your resume to as many recruiters as you need to find a position.
THEN:
When you get an offer you will get a contract.
Sign it.
Send it back along with the hard copies of your "certified degree copy" and your CBC and a few passport type photos.
They will submit it to K-immi and get you a visa confirmation number.
When you get the number you go to the K-consulate in S.A. and get your visa.
They may interview you - they may not.
AS LONG AS YOU ARE LEGALLY RESIDENT IN S.A. YOU CAN DO YOUR INTERVIEW THERE or by video conference with the consulate in Ireland.
If you are there on a tourist stamp you MAY have to do your interview in Ireland.
When you have your visa in your passport you fly to Korea and start work.
Within 90 days of starting work you will have your medical check and apply for your ARC (alien registration card).
Now you continue for as long as you want (with annual renewals).
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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 12:46 am Post subject: |
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Im on a 'temporary resident' permit.
I dont know if that will effect it.
Thanks for your help. I really appreciate it.
Justine |
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Troglodyte

Joined: 06 Dec 2009
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 4:34 am Post subject: |
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You'll probably get more replies if you use a descriptive title for the thread. e.g. "Irish passport, but living in SA. What to do about CBC?"
If you didn't have the Irish passport, where would you be a citizen? Where were you born? Have you explained your situation to the recruiters? If not, do so. Otherwise, you could put a lot of work into applying for jobs and then get turned down at the last minute. |
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Justine
Joined: 02 Oct 2009
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Posted: Tue Aug 24, 2010 4:40 am Post subject: |
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I was born in Zimbabwe (yeah, its extremely complicated)
Thanks for the advise.
I am explain my situation in detail to recruiters but they can not help at all. |
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