User profile: Hotwater

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Does our baby need a visa to be in China?

Yuantongsi wrote "Instead you could go to Thailand or any other country where Chinese can get a visa on arrival, then when you land in that country use her Aussie passport to continue your journey to Oz." and what about on the way back through Thailand? That's the way they'll have to come back as the Chinese passport will have to show entry & exit stamps from Thailand.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Obtaining a Resident Visa (Green Book)

Ah yes, the fabled D visa/green card/"permanent" residence permit (though 10 years isn't "permanent"!)

Allegedly being made easier to qualify for but still for most people would require 5 years marriage AND lived in China during that time.

So a stupid question....if you've lived in China for >5 years what value is an outdated certificate of no criminal record from your home country worth?

I'd like to aim for this in 4 years time by which point I'll have been living here for 8 years! So a no criminal record certificate from my home country would be a bit pointless after this time. Especially as in the UK the majority of convictions are considered spent after 5-10 years unless they led to a prison sentence of >2.5 years.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Child permit

Great feedback Laotou. Just one clarification from what I know from my Scottish friend. Children here can't have dual nationality under Chinese law. They are either Chinese or not. His daughter is Chinese BUT he also registered her birth quietly at the British consulate so at any time until she is 18 she can go & claim British citizenship & renounce her Chinese nationality.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Child permit

And most foreigners won't have known about this because in the experience of my Scottish friend his wife/mothe-in-law dealt with it. He only found out because he asked!

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Child permit

Find out where the local baby control office is (I know it's not called that!). There is normally a small government office in each area, normally attached/close to a police station. They'll be able to tell you the rules, not a bunch of foreigners on an expat forum.

Anecdote, so don't quote me! Scottish friend of mine married to Cantonese lady (in Guangzhou). They had to go to the local population control officer & get a baby book before the birth. This showed she'd not had a baby before & they could then access hospitals for ante-natal care & the birth.

Chinese friend of theirs, with hukou in Guangxi also had to do the same thing, in the same area (Austrian husband). Location of her hukou wasn't an issue.

Both babies registered as Chinese after so in these cases the baby books were needed.

So....get you wife to speak to the local government population control office to find out the exact rules. They are there to help!

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"Kunming was more recently thought to be in the hunt for a new Chinese Super League franchise. Rumors were rampant that European coaching legend Sven-Göran Eriksson was considered a front-runner to run the team, but nothing ever came from such efforts."

Sven is past it! He's done nothing in his time in China at GZ Fuli, SIPG or Shenzhen.

@Janjal, good point about 15 years old & marriage. What about these (combined) points:

"while the other two are working in another city. Their parents have promised the two children will return to school next semester."

"A kid working in the city can bring back 20,000 yuan [US$3,000] a year," an official at a county-level education bureau in Yunnan told local media in 2014"

So local officials are condoning children working illegally underage? First quote is more valid as it refers directly to this case! They know two of the kids are working illegally & havent dome anything about it except get "promises" from the parents that they'll send them back to school "next semester"!

"However, business owners such as Mr Zhao, who spent six million yuan (US$870,000) to open a guesthouse, worries about his livelihood and those of his employees. He blames government inaction and "hasty decisions" for the entire situation, saying:"

Well maybe if he'd built his guesthouse properly with connections to sewage, etc he wouldn't be in this position now...

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