Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
India

Punjabi Student Arrested, Facing Deportation In Canada For ‘Working Beyond Stipulated Hours’

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 May, 2019 08:38 PM

    Jobandeep Sandhu, an international student from Punjab, India, was arrested on the side of Ontario’s Highway 401 for working too much. Now he could be deported.

     

    On Dec. 13, 2017, while driving a commercial vehicle between Montreal and Toronto, Sandhu, 22, was pulled over by an Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) officer at the side of Highway 401 for a “routine traffic stop,” a report said.


    After a few minutes and with little explanation, he claims he was arrested, handcuffed and placed in the back seat of an OPP squad car.


    While the background check of Sandhu showed he had no criminal history till the time of his arrest, the perusal of his driver log book revealed that he had worked “way beyond’ the stipulated 20 hours a week allowed to any international student in Canada by the Canadian government.


    The Canadian rules stipulated that the international students studying in Canada could work up to 20 hours a week “off campus” without a separate work visa.



    During summer vacations and scheduled breaks, they are, however, allowed to work full time.


    While Sandhu has pleaded that by working full time he could afford his studies, the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has said he was “inadmissible” to Canada for having breached the terms of his study permit and that the decision regarding his impending deportation was even upheld by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada.


    He has been pleading he had committed no crime in Canada “except for working” and had “never lied” about it.


    To save himself from the impending deportation, Sandhu has urged the government of Canada that too high tuition and living costs of roughly 27,000 (CAD) per annum had made him work beyond the allocated work hours.


    He has pleaded before the Canadian authorities that he did not work initially after landing in Canada as his parents had covered his expenditure by exhausting their lifetime savings and they even had to attain loans from private lenders at a high rate of interest.


    He said he had started working full time—roughly up to 35-40 hours a week—only when he had switched colleges and when his schedule had undergone a change.


    He has also pleaded that he had to work more than stipulated hours for he had to bear the tuition and expenses of his brother who too had landed in Canada as an international student.



    On the other hand, the stance of the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has been that limiting off campus work to 20 hours per week during session was aimed at offering an opportunity to students to gain valuable workplace experience in the country and to earn some money as well.


    When Sandhu was arrested he was just 10 days away from finishing his diploma mechanical engineering at Mississauga-based Canadore College.


    Experts in the field of study abroad say though it was not unusual for any police official to report suspected immigration breaches to the CBSA, the authorities “went beyond the brief” if Sandhu’s case was seen from the law enforcement angle.


    The Ontario Provincial Police, however, has not responded to Sandhu’s claims.


    Before 2006, international students in Canada were only allowed to work on campus. But, after a number of pilot projects by the then Stephen Harper-led Conservative government, it had launched the Off-Campus Work Permit Programme allowing foreign students to apply for permits for working up to 20 hours a week after having completed six months of their studies.


    In 2014, the Harper government had further relaxed the rules by waiving the condition of a separate work permit thus allowing students to start working as soon as they arrived in Canada.


    The experts however, have cautioned that anyone wanting to work full time in Canada should apply for a work visa and not a study permit.

     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Stranded Indian Expatriate Leaves Saudi Arabia

    Stranded Indian Expatriate Leaves Saudi Arabia
    Rajan Palakkundu Parambil, a 53-year-old worker from Malappuram in Kerala, was employed by a contracting company in Najran, a Saudi city that shares a border with Yemen, the Saudi Gazette reported.    

    Stranded Indian Expatriate Leaves Saudi Arabia

    Technical Meeting On Kartarpur Corridor On April 16: Pakistan

    “We expect positivity from India so that the corridor becomes reality for 550th celebrations,” he further said.

    Technical Meeting On Kartarpur Corridor On April 16: Pakistan

    Irish International Human Rights Lawyer Simone Burns Spits At Air India Attendant, Jailed In UK

    Simone Burns, an Irish lawyer, spat at a flight attendant during her foul-mouthed racist tirade after she was refused alcohol on the flight in November last year.  

    Irish International Human Rights Lawyer Simone Burns Spits At Air India Attendant, Jailed In UK

    DRUG OFFICER’S MURDER: Neha Shoree Had Saved Killer’s Number On Her Phone

    The Special Investigation Team (SIT) formed by the Punjab Government to probe the Neha Shoree murder case has found the name and number of the killer saved on her phone. 

    DRUG OFFICER’S MURDER: Neha Shoree Had Saved Killer’s Number On Her Phone

    Indian Journal Publisher Fined $50 Million In US For Duping Academics

    An Indian journal publisher and his companies have been fined over USD 50 million in the US for making “deceptive claims” to academics about the nature of their work and taking millions of dollars from aspiring researchers and writers.

    Indian Journal Publisher Fined $50 Million In US For Duping Academics

    'Will Send You To Jail,' Ranbaxy Singh Brothers Told By Court If Guilty Of Contempt

    The Bench, also comprising Justices Deepak Gupta and Sanjiv Khanna, has now fixed the contempt petition of the Japanese firms against the former Ranbaxy promoters for hearing on April 11.

    'Will Send You To Jail,' Ranbaxy Singh Brothers Told By Court If Guilty Of Contempt