Student resident permit /visa application to FINLAND and other Schengen/Nordic countries.

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  • čas přidán 20. 03. 2022

Komentáře • 13

  • @kevinwainaina9055
    @kevinwainaina9055 Před 2 lety

    Great work Carthie..keep on pushing.. cheers

  • @ajewolemayokun7696
    @ajewolemayokun7696 Před 9 měsíci

    How will I know the date for students, will it be written there?

  • @agirlfromweithaga
    @agirlfromweithaga Před 2 lety

    Good Job 👏

  • @mercynyambura7093
    @mercynyambura7093 Před 6 měsíci

    How can i reach you for more information..

  • @just42tube
    @just42tube Před 2 lety

    There are different meanings to the word visa in different countries. Sometimes the difference comes from the fact that local legislation is using other languages and the terminology used there doesn't map nicely 1 to 1 to English terminology.
    An example is the Finnish word viisumi, which is defined in section 3 of the Finnish Aliens Act. The translation, which the ministry of justice and everyone else are using for that word, is Visa.
    Then there is an other permit, oleskelulupa, which is translated to Residence Permit. By the definition in the Finnish Aliens Act those terms have very different meanings. But in some European countries and elsewhere visa is used to mean both of those meanings, but not totally overlapping there either, which makes using foreign terminology with Finnish immigration and entry permits misleading.
    My advice is to forget the conventions of other countries and use only terms as defined in the Finnish Aliens Act and the Finnish Immigration service. Some Finnish authorities don't do that always, they might use international meanings talking about Student Visa or Work Visa, which actually don't exist in those meanings that people believe the words to mean.
    The most simple and useful way to use the word visa is to use as it is used with Schengen Visa, a permit to enter and stay for no more than 90 days in each 180 day period.
    Visa (viisumi in Finnish) is for short visits. That is a good simple rule to remember.
    Any longer stay will need residence permit (oleskelulupa in Finnish). And visa is not residence permit and vise versa, even if they can be in other countries.

    • @carthiekoivari
      @carthiekoivari  Před 2 lety

      👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽 yeah, you should really do a CZcams video, you have too much info that could benefit lots of people ☺️

    • @just42tube
      @just42tube Před 2 lety +1

      @@carthiekoivari I am so hopelessly old fashioned that I still read and sometimes even write. I also have the type of personality for whom details matter, which I find easier to try to handle in written text.
      And I don't care to have any publicity.. which makes making videos also uninteresting for me.
      CZcams suggest some channels for me to watch. I watch and care enough about some details to write some comments. I try to be factually correct and even helpful, though others don't seem to experience all my comments to be that.

    • @lusainjason7788
      @lusainjason7788 Před 2 lety

      Can the schegen visa be converted to student visa in Finland?

    • @just42tube
      @just42tube Před 2 lety

      @@lusainjason7788 You have to remember that there
      1) is no study or student Visa for Finland. There is Residence Permit for studies.
      2) the purposes of Visas and Residence Permits are different. Visa is for staying for short visits (max 90 days in 180 day periods). Residence permits are for staying in the country.
      If your studies require less thay 90 day visits to Finland, then Visa is all you need. Only for staying longer you need Residence Permit.
      3) You don't convert permissions. You apply for new permits, which better fit your new intentions of staying for some reason.