WI12 China Special Work Instructions (07/12/2015)
- These instructions allow limited numbers of citizens of the People's Republic of China who are qualified in certain occupations, and who hold a full-time New Zealand job offer in that occupation, to be granted a work visa and entry permission.
- To be considered under these instructions the applicant must be one of the following:
- a Chinese chef who has a Chinese Occupational Skills Testing Authority Certificate Level 3 in traditional cuisine; or
- a Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) practitioner (including a TCM nurse) who has a higher education degree requiring at least three years' successful study in TCM from an institution recognised by the Chinese government; or
- a Mandarin teachers' aide who has a higher education degree requiring at least three years' successful study; or
- a Wushu Martial Arts coach with Wushu Grade 3-5 Certificate and a post-compulsory education qualification in either physical education or teaching requiring at least two years' successful study from an institution recognised by the Chinese government; or
- a Wushu Martial Arts coach with Wushu Grade 6-9 Certificate and five years' teaching experience; or
- a Chinese tour guide who, at the time of application, holds a valid Tour Guide Licence in China, and can demonstrate knowledge of New Zealand and holds an International English Language Testing System (IELTS) Level 5 certificate in Listening and Speaking English. The IELTS certificate must be no more than two years old at the time the application is lodged.
- At any one time, the number of Chinese nationals holding a visa granted for any occupation under these instructions must not exceed the following:
- 200 Chinese chefs;
- 200 TCM practitioners (including TCM nurses);
- 150 Mandarin teachers' aides;
- 150 Chinese Wushu Martial Arts coaches; and
- 100 Chinese tour guides.
- To be granted a work visa under these instructions, applicants must:
- provide a completed work visa application form, fee and immigration levy; and
- have a full-time New Zealand job offer in one of the occupations listed above, which meets the requirements set out in W2.10; and
- meet the specific qualifications and/or experience requirement for their occupation, as detailed in WI12(b) above; and
- meet health and character requirements set out in A4 and A5; and
- meet the requirements for bona fide applicants set out in E5.
Note: For the purpose of these instructions the job offer for a Mandarin teacher’s aide may meet the requirements at W2.10.5 and W2.10.10 if the applicant presents a letter showing they have been nominated by the Ministries of Education in New Zealand and China.
- A labour market check is not required.
- Applications for a work visa under these instructions must be lodged in China unless WI12(h) or (j) applies.
- Successful applicants will be granted a work visa and entry permission with the following conditions:
- first entry to New Zealand must be made within six months; and
- the work visa will be valid for multiple entries to New Zealand for a maximum of three years, depending on the length of their job offer.
- An application for an initial work visa under these instructions may be lodged by a person who is lawfully in New Zealand on a work or student visa, and who is a:
- TCM practitioner;
- Mandarin teachers’ aide;
- Wushu Martial Arts coach; or
- tour guide.
- Successful applicants who apply in New Zealand will be granted a work visa with multiple-entry travel conditions for a maximum of three years, depending on the length of their job offer.
- If the initial visa is valid for less than three years, a further visa may be granted onshore for the balance of the three-year period, as long as the applicant still meets all the requirements of these instructions.
- Work visas granted under these instructions must be endorsed with conditions that allow work only for a specified employer in a specified occupation.
- On completion of the three-year period, applicants must remain outside New Zealand for three years before applying for a further visa under these instructions.
Note: These instructions reflect New Zealand's international trade commitments (see E9).
Effective 07/12/2015
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