letter offering: But he said a case CBC recently uncovered in Saskatchewan is the first time on record someone was caught as he put it green-handed, according to CBC. In an undercover investigation, CBC's iTeam recorded an immigration consultant offering to pay a Prince Albert, Sask., business owner cash in exchange for a letter offering a Chinese national a job. It's almost the stuff of immigration legendary myth that there are envelopes of cash being passed around for offers of employment in Canada, said the Vancouver-based lawyer and immigration policy analyst. Cash-for-jobs immigration consultant connected to Sask. government-backed Chinese megamall And it may, in fact, be part of a larger scam. According to Reid, Sui told her his immigration consulting company, Vstar International, would pay the salary and benefits of a would-be Chinese immigrant for three months of work if she simply provided a job offer. It sounds pretty sketchy and something just can't be quite legal with the whole process.'- Barb Reid, owner, Prince Albert Fabricland Last month, a man named Bill Sui dropped by Fabricland in Prince Albert and told owner Barb Reid his company was looking for Canadian jobs to offer to Chinese people wanting to immigrate.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under letter offering, case cbc topics.
21.6.17