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Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by kessel: 9:50pm On May 05, 2018
Hi, how is that flinders uni, I reluctantly accepted there offer for Msc in nursing.
sweetgal81:
My school is Flinders University at Adelaide
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by kessel: 9:58pm On May 05, 2018
Thanks Bellong for all the contribution. But this your advice, are you really saying that Adelaide is expensive and no job? I just paid my application for flinders uni and this advice got to me
bellong:


You will pay school fees. About $4500/year the last I know.

If you are coming on student visa, why not go to state that will be cheaper for you and one you can easily get a job to do.

Forget about South Australia. Of course, if God specifically asked you to choose SA, so be it.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by zimunachimdi: 10:19pm On May 05, 2018
bellong:

You can only do a three month course on visitor's visa
Thanks sir
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by FBS: 11:58pm On May 08, 2018
Didn't bother with bringing any food item. You can get most of the stuff you need here.




Anyways, preparing for winter. grin
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Mcslize: 8:23am On May 09, 2018
FBS:
Didn't bother with bringing any food item. You can get most of the stuff you need here.




Anyways, preparing for winter. grin

Can one get Yam, potatoes, plantain there?
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Rach90: 8:38am On May 09, 2018
Hello everyone, I already dropped a comment on other thread and no one seems to answer me. I read the introductory part of the PR process but am getting more confused reading. My profile is
Age: 27 (30 points)
Education: Bsc(ed) Mathematics
IELTS: registered, waiting to write exam
Work Experience: 2yrs in Banking (marketing)

I don't know where to go from here, am confused of which subclass to go for considering my years on experience and my course being different from banking. Please I will appreciate a swift response so I can start the process. Thank you
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by happy4lucy: 1:18pm On May 09, 2018
Please how do people who migrate get dollar? We went to bank and we were told that we are not entitled to buy from bank.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Bellacious: 1:24pm On May 09, 2018
happy4lucy:
Please how do people who migrate get dollar? We went to bank and we were told that we are not entitled to buy from bank.
Bank keh? Go BDC na, i.e. Bureau de change.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by jayooh: 1:59pm On May 09, 2018
happy4lucy:
Please how do people who migrate get dollar? We went to bank and we were told that we are not entitled to buy from bank.
You're entitled to 4k max quarterly. Evidence of flight arrangement will be necessary, though, with a not a so far off departure date
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by happy4lucy: 2:32pm On May 09, 2018
jayooh:

You're entitled to 4k max quarterly. Evidence of flight arrangement will be necessary, though, with a not a so far off departure date

They said since it is one way ticket we are not entitled to... biko is any other bank expect first bank that issue dollar for travel?
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Nonny100: 4:05pm On May 09, 2018
Good day all....Pls I want to migrate to Australia through the skilled occupation medium. I have a Bsc in biochemistry and msc in environmental toxicology and pollution management. I have 2 yrs experience as a lab technician...What occupation can I apply to and how do I go about it. Thank u
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by FBS: 10:14pm On May 09, 2018
Mcslize:


Can one get Yam, potatoes, plantain there?
Very well yes. Just got some the other day. Maybe a tad expensive as everything else in Australia, but yes, you can can get them here.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Nobody: 12:47am On May 10, 2018
happy4lucy:


They said since it is one way ticket we are not entitled to... biko is any other bank expect first bank that issue dollar for travel?

You won't be given on a one way ticket.

The difference with BDC's is just 2naira.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Solitin40: 1:48am On May 10, 2018
happy4lucy:
Please how do people who migrate get dollar? We went to bank and we were told that we are not entitled to buy from bank.
Contact Austransaction ASAP that’s the way
Open an Aussie account from Nigeria I was able to open NAB and ANZ

Austransaction transferred AUD to my account and I gave him Naira transaction not up to 10mins so fast and cheap

1 Like

Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Solitin40: 1:51am On May 10, 2018
jayooh:

You're entitled to 4k max quarterly. Evidence of flight arrangement will be necessary, though, with a not a so far off departure date
Why all these wahala when Aboki is selling for 361 and Banks 360 with too much documents and Austransaction is selling Cheap Cheap and note If you Change USD to AUD the valve will drop so much just use Austransaction

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Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Solitin40: 1:55am On May 10, 2018
FBS:

Very well yes. Just got some the other day. Maybe a tad expensive as everything else in Australia, but yes, you can can get them here.
To me all these food stuffs are not expensive at all Australia is far to Nigeria they will pay tax and also rent and electricity abeg it’s cheap joor by the way the plantain you talking about is it the "Ogede” type of 9ja or the one in Nylon
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by FBS: 4:00am On May 10, 2018
Solitin40:

To me all these food stuffs are not expensive at all Australia is far to Nigeria they will pay tax and also rent and electricity abeg it’s cheap joor by the way the plantain you talking about is it the "Ogede” type of 9ja or the one in Nylon
Well I think they are expensive just like everything else. Forget all that paying tax and megedefegede talk. Expensive is expensive but then "affordable". By that I mean you can buy it if you want to.

And I'm talking about real ogede. As a matter of fact had yam, plantain and stew with epo pupa cheesy for dinner last night. grin

5 Likes

Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Nobody: 6:09am On May 10, 2018
FBS:

Very well yes. Just got some the other day. Maybe a tad expensive as everything else in Australia, but yes, you can can get them here.

Pls where can I get all these to buy in Melbourne?
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Mikey(m): 7:51am On May 10, 2018
House, is their anyone with tourist visa experience here? I’m currently on TR visa and wish to bring my family over for holidays.. Cheers
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by bligs: 8:31am On May 10, 2018
samge:


Pls where can I get all these to buy in Melbourne?
There is one Fatima at 15 Gilbert street braybrook, you will get anything you looking for in terms of naija food.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by bellong: 8:58am On May 10, 2018
Mikey:
House, is their anyone with tourist visa experience here? I’m currently on TR visa and wish to bring my family over for holidays.. Cheers

If the tourist visa covers your family, you are free to bring them along for the holiday.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Nobody: 9:02am On May 10, 2018
bligs:

There is one Fatima at 15 Gilbert street braybrook, you will get anything you looking for in terms of naija food.

Ok thanks been there several time about no
Yam or plantain
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Nobody: 9:02am On May 10, 2018
bligs:

There is one Fatima at 15 Gilbert street braybrook, you will get anything you looking for in terms of naija food.

Ok thanks been there several times about no
Yam or plantain
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by tyosho: 10:27am On May 10, 2018
samge:


Ok thanks been there several times about no
Yam or plantain

I would strongly suggest that you bring as much food items as you can from Nigeria.Especially items like dried fish,egusi,ogbono,seasonings ,spices etc.Just make sure they are properly labeled(in transparent zip lock bags preferably)and without any pests.Dont worry about Garri,poundo yam,semo etc.They are available here though slightly expensive but affordable.

Potatoes are cheap,plantains are available but very expensive(if you ask me).I fry lady finger bananas instead and it”s just fine.There”s frozen plantain too but I have never bought it.


Yams are seasonal.It comes around once a year and this is the season.I have paid for 80kg worth which I intend to freeze and hopefully use until next year.The last time I had yams was like Aug last year so I’m not making that mistake again and buying in bulk this time.

Someone told me where to get frozen yams too but I have never tried to.


Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone

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Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by aussy4life: 10:56am On May 10, 2018
Hi Guys,

Am trying to open a NAB account from Naija and i came across this questions(Are you a resident of any other country for tax purposes?) yes or No , when i click yes it took me to another page with this (ou've indicated that you're a resident of one or more countries other than Australia and the U.S.) Do you have a Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) for this country? Should I to just click No and move on?

And for Commonwealth Bank no place to add our naija number or country.

Please someone should come to my rescue.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by bligs: 1:21pm On May 10, 2018
samge:


Ok thanks been there several times about no
Yam or plantain
She used to have yam but not sure about plantain, maybe you don't usually go there whenever yam is available.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Michaelamo: 4:49pm On May 10, 2018
Rach90:
Hello everyone, I already dropped a comment on other thread and no one seems to answer me. I read the introductory part of the PR process but am getting more confused reading. My profile is
Age: 27 (30 points)
Education: Bsc(ed) Mathematics
IELTS: registered, waiting to write exam
Work Experience: 2yrs in Banking (marketing)

I don't know where to go from here, am confused of which subclass to go for considering my years on experience and my course being different from banking. Please I will appreciate a swift response so I can start the process. Thank you


There is "Mathematician" on the occupational list and the assessing body is Vetasses. That should normally be your route, however, you need to have at least 12 months experience in that field to get a positive assessment from Vetasses.

If using your banking experience, then you may want to nominate " customers service manager" and tailor your experience in that line. With this your degree would not matter much, but one thing I'm not yet sure of is if you needed 5 years work experience for that not to matter. You can do yourself a lot of good in searching Vetasses site for all the information you seek.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Michaelamo: 4:53pm On May 10, 2018
Nonny100:
Good day all....Pls I want to migrate to Australia through the skilled occupation medium. I have a Bsc in biochemistry and msc in environmental toxicology and pollution management. I have 2 yrs experience as a lab technician...What occupation can I apply to and how do I go about it. Thank u


https://www.anzscosearch.com/mltssl/

https://www.anzscosearch.com/stsol/


Check those links for closely related occupation that you can nominate.
Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by babylappy(f): 9:41pm On May 10, 2018
Yeeshas:
Hello All,

Hope everyone is doing great? So I have been meaning to come here to share my story after I landed in Sydney, Australia, but life has been from one event to the other but tonight, I had to stop myself to do this.

Before I start, I wanna give a shout out to Bellong and say a big thank you for starting this Australian thread because I cannot emphasize the tremendous help we got from the nairaland thread during our application process from start to finish. So let me cut straight to it.

We landed in Sydney Australia by midnight sometime in January and because it was that time of the night, our luggage was only scanned but not thoroughly checked so I guess we got away with all our food items. We were accommodated by a family whom we connected with through a dear friend of ours. We stayed with this family for two weeks after which we then moved to our own apartment.

Getting our apartment was not a walk in the park, we were simply favored. One agent wanted to swindle us of an additional $350 because he perceived we were newbies and desperate to move to our own place, we didn't fall for it because he was asking us to make the payment for the 'paper works'he was going to prepare for us because we didn't meet the 100 points criteria in order to secure an accommodation. Anyway, to cut the long story short, we threatened to report him but eventually moved on to search for other properties, he later called us back and gave us the property without the 'paperwork' fee.

We currently live in Liverpool, a 2 bedroom apartment for $350 per week and I must say it isn't bad at all. The apartment comes with a communal pool and a basketball court. We have never used it though. It is also close to everything, train station, the mall, medical centre and all.

Our first two weeks after arriving here was very rough, one because of the jetlag and then the paperwork, job-hunt, house-hunt, add to the fact that we were putting up with a family we were meeting for the first time. It wasn't exactly the best of experience but we are grateful. Things began to ease out after we moved to our own apartment.

Regarding job search, the truth is that my husband and I were open-minded and were not very selective at first because we had gathered info here on nairaland about starting off and all. My husband got a Warehouse job a day after we moved to our apartment and he was asked to start immediately, four days later, he got another job offer at Fujitsu as a Stock Plan Administrator which is basically data entry and administering the company's stock plans, although this job is better for him, however, it is not in line with his career. He has a background in Network Security and so has currently enrolled in a scholarship program in Cyber Security. The Australian govt. is currently investing in the Cyber Security industry because of shortage in the skill availability.

We immediately enrolled our Son in daycare so I could attend interviews. We were paying $465 per week until his immunization was updated and we now pay $143 per week for 5 days because of childcare rebate. We also got the outstanding back after his childcare rebate was activated. We attend Hillsong church and I must say it's a beautiful place to worship. We didn't get a car yet because we are very close to the train station and our son's daycare is only a street away plus we are saving up to buy a very good car too.

I left my job story for the last because I am extremely grateful to God for this and I also wanted to use it to encourage folks coming down here. After about 2 weeks of job search, I got a Customer Service job at a Telecoms company called BSA where I was a Remediation officer. I earned $26 per hour and it was a contract job. After 3 weeks or so of working there, my shift got changed to 11 am - 7 pm shift and so I had to stop work because my Son's daycare closes by 6 pm and you pay $1 per minute for every minute after 6 pm.

I applied for more jobs and granted a couple of interviews and as God would have it, on one of those days, I made an application for a job with 'Private Advertiser" written on it. (I am normally reluctant to apply for such vacancies) but I went ahead anyway and then I was asked to answer a couple of questions and write a cover letter. (these were things I didn't like doing but I did it anyway). A day later, I got a call from a guy saying he was from Samsung Australia and if I could come in for an interview and I'm like "Absolutely"! To cut the story short, after 2 stages of the interview (one individual and another group interview) with very intimidating guys especially because I don't have the Australian 'phoneee'accent, I was a bit intimidated by these other candidates. Anyway, I got the job and it is a permanent job with amazing pay and benefits including a 4-week annual paid leave, 10 days paid carer's leave, 50 percent staff discount off Samsung products and several other benefits. Why did I take the pain to spell out some of the benefits? Because when we came into Australia, some people told us it was hard to get a permanent job as a newbie and even a professional job for that matter and bla bla but this is really not the case. If you believe it, then you can have it.

I currently work as a VOC Case Manager at the Samsung head office in Australia. The role simply means dispute management, processing of refunds, repairs, exchange and what not, pretty much making a disgruntled customer happy again.

Its been a little over three months since we came here and we can't be more grateful to God for how He has settled us quickly and in ways we didn't even imagine. Generally its easy to save here as long as you don't live above your means.

I'll stop here and I wish you all the very best.

PS: I also resumed Uni for my Master's degree at the University of Sydney but I have now put that on hold for some time because I work full time and it was too much for me so I suspended it for now.

Please ma'am will like to chat with you ma. I need the process of how we you go about it. Ma.

2 Likes

Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Jokhas: 9:45pm On May 10, 2018
@LORD BELLONG, @MADAM ZANYZARA @MADAM TYOSHO

Hello House,

I want to specifically thank everyone on this forum and the key members for their thoughtful responses to intending settlers in Australia.

Although am new to this blog and forum, I have been reading all the post as a guest and this have enabled me undertake my own migration process all by myself without any help at all.

To the glory of God, my family and I have just been granted the SI 189 Visa on the 7th of April and I intend to move July of this year.

Please I want to beg any good Godsent member who reside in SYDNEY to please accomodate me for about 4 weeks to enable me the time to settle down before my family arrive, I am willing to pay for this should the need arise.

I have read about flatshare etc on this blog and on this forum, but I truly want to stay with a migrant like myself to further guide me on other activities I am expected to do such as Medicare, Centerlink, tax and importantly my way around town etc.

Thanks.

Jokhas

5 Likes

Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by bellong: 11:14pm On May 10, 2018
@Jokhas,

Congratulations on your grant.

I live in Adelaide, South Australia, it is about 16hours drive to Sydney.

Hopefully someone living in Sydney can be of help to you.

4 Likes

Re: Living In Australia/life As An Australian Immigrant by Solitin40: 5:57am On May 11, 2018
FBS:

Well I think they are expensive just like everything else. Forget all that paying tax and megedefegede talk. Expensive is expensive but then "affordable". By that I mean you can buy it if you want to.

And I'm talking about real ogede. As a matter of fact had yam, plantain and stew with epo pupa cheesy for dinner last night. grin
Abeg where is your base ? NSW ?

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