I am thinking to immigrate to one of these countries: US, UK, Australia and Canada. Which is better?

Posted November 8th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

Hi,
I am thinking to immigrate to one of the four countries: US, UK, Canada, and Australia. Me and my fiancee have decided to settle in one of those but haven’t been able to finalize which one to choose. We are from Asia and both of us are working as software engineers. I am in UK and my fiancee is in US.

Any suggestion regarding the quality of life, job security, immigration… Any strong reason to choose one over others?

PLEASE HELP!!: are these the only occupation a skilled worker can apply for to imigrate. To Canada(cic.gc.ca)?

Posted October 21st, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

I have the dream of moving to Canada soon, Im from Nicaragua and the skilled worker programme is my best option, but I am a software engineer and I dont find my occupation on the list, BUT, theres this on the bottom:

NOTE: the occupations above are all Skill Type 0 (managerial occupations) or Skill Level A (professional occupations) or B (technical occupations and skilled trades) on the Canadian National Occupational Classification list.

I searched for Software engineering and it was there, so I am really confused, is Software engineering an occupation in Demand in Canada or not….. Again please and thank you so much!
Heres the link of the lists and the note is at the bottom:

http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/skilled/apply-who-instructions.asp#list

Again thank you so much!

I keep seeing these local girls going to the houses of boys whose families immigrated to Canada. Do girls?

Posted August 31st, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

instinctively like dating boys who come from far-away places and thus avoid mild incest by dating local boys?

please tell me, which of these canadian attorneys is genuine for skilled labour migration to canada?

Posted October 17th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

If I Immigrate to Canada, Can I have the citizenship in three years if I traveled in these three years?

Posted August 20th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Uncategorized

Or I have to stay Three years continuously? because I heared that If I traveled outside Canada, I will take the Citizenship after 5 years!! Is that right?

can you translate these English paragraph to Tagalog abouts demographics???

Posted May 12th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Uncategorized

The UAE population has an unnatural sex distribution consisting of more than twice the number of males than females. The 15-65 age group has a male(s)/female sex ratio of 2.743. UAE’s gender imbalance is the highest among any nation in the world followed by Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, and Saudi Arabia – all of which together comprise the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).[4] The GCC states are also what most South and Southeast Asians refer to as the Persian Gulf especially in context of emigration.[5]

UAE has one of the most diverse populations in the Middle East.[6] 19 % of the population is Emirati, and 23 % is other Arabs and Iranians [7]. An estimated 85 percent of the population is comprised of non-citizens, one of the world’s highest percentages of foreign-born in any nation. In addition, since the mid-1980s, people from all across South Asia have settled in the UAE. The high living standards and economic opportunities in the UAE are better than almost anywhere else in the Middle East and South Asia. This makes the nation an attractive destination for Indians, Filipinos, Pakistanis, and Bangladeshis along with a few thousand Sri Lankans. In 2006, there were approximately 2.15 million Indian nationals, Philippines Nationals—OFW, Bangladeshi nationals, and Pakistani nationals in the UAE, making them the largest expatriate community in the oil-rich nation.[8] Persons from over twenty Arab nationalities, including thousands of Palestinians who came as either political refugees or migrant workers, also live in the United Arab Emirates. There is also a sizable number of Emiratis from other Arab League nations who have come before the formation of the Emirates such as Egyptians, Somalis, Sudanese and other Gulf Arab states, who have adopted the native culture and customs. Further, Somali immigration also continued in the 1990s as a result of the Somali civil war.
A woman shopping at Dubai Duty Free
A woman shopping at Dubai Duty Free

There are also residents from other parts of the Middle East, Baluchistan region of Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, Africa, Europe, Post-Soviet states, and North America. The UAE has attracted a small number of very affluent expatriates (Americans, British, Canadians, Japanese, Chinese and Australians) from developed countries who are attracted to a very warm climate, scenic views (beaches, golf courses, man-made islands and lucrative housing tracts in Abu Dhabi and Dubai), the nation’s comparably low cost of living (but in 2006, thousands of real estate properties are valued over millions of dollars) and tax-free incentives for their business or residency in the UAE. They make up under 5 percent of the UAE population; mainly English-speaking. Expatriates adhere to the law and customs of the UAE, their adopted country.

The most populated city is Dubai, with approximately 1.6 million people. Other major cities include Abu Dhabi, Al Ain, Sharjah, and Fujairah. About 88% of the population of the United Arab Emirates is urban.[9] The remaining inhabitants live in tiny towns scattered throughout the country or in one of the many desert oilfield camps in the nation.