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immigration

Gyopos gone wild

by Cat on November 10, 2006

An article in the Dong-A Ilbo about Korean detective agencies going global contained some interesting anecdotes about Korean kids living abroad. (Well, not really “abroad” so much as living in the Great Western Satan United States, specifically.)

The parent asked, “It has only been a couple days since I sent our child money, but he is asking for more. I want to know if he is being bullied by other kids for money.”

The S Agency made a request to a partner detective agency in Los Angeles. The agency in Los Angeles soon pursued the whereabouts of the student, Lee (age 16), who is in the eleventh grade.

Lee had pretty much given up on school. He went to school, but he left right away with several friends. He would go to a restroom in a park, do cocaine, buy beer, and head to his friend’s house.

Wow. Here I was thinking it was likely he was blowing money on junk food, a new Xbox, and the latest Tommy Hilfiger. But if you think even that’s living a bit large for a high school junior, keep reading.

During weekends, he and four other friends would take an eight-hour drive to casinos in Las Vegas. Lee lost $3,000 in one night.

Well, I’ll say if there’s some kind of host family blacklist out there, I think this kid’s sponsors should definitely be on it. And, just to scare some more down off those goose fathers out there, we have this little tale:

In April, Mr. Han (age 46) asked a company to investigate his wife and son, who are living in Canada. He was worried because his wife seldom called and his son’s voice over the phone sounded somewhat strange.

Private detectives in Montreal reported that his wife often met with other men and his son, a high school student, went to bars practically every day. The Hans divorced and the son returned to Korea.

The rest of the article is boring, fairly well-supported stuff about how detective agencies are helping Korean multinationals thwart fraud and embezzlement, too. But that doesn’t pack nearly the editorial punch of those hard-partying exchange students.

I wonder which category supplies steadier business?

If you’re an expat here, you can now find information about immigration issues, labor relations and investment opportunities all on one government website.

The new G4F of Korea collects info you previously had to search for in various different different divisions of various different agencies (Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Labor, Seoul Help Center for Foreigners, KOTRA, etc.) all on one web portal. (G4F= government for foreigners. Cute, huh?)

Particularly useful, I think, is the section dealing with employment issues. Information about Korean labor regulations and the requirements for changing your employer, applying for permission to extend your stay, or applying for permission to work beyond the status of your current visa are all there and easy to find.

Contrast that with the hours I had to spend last month looking up different regulations on a variety of government websites or privately run expat forums, trying to balance conflicting interpretations, and searching through lots of Q&A sections looking for my answer.

Even then, I didn’t think it required a super-human effort. I am sure immigration regulations back in the States are equally, if not more, cumbersome. But, the new website makes finding such information much easier. And, at least in the five or 10 minutes I spent looking at it this morning, there don’t appear to be any glitches, bad links, or out of date information. It’s a pretty impressive effort.