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I am 17 years old, can I leave Ukraine for Russia? On what grounds can I live in Russia, and will I have any problems with living?
I am 17 years old, can I leave Ukraine for Russia? On what grounds can I live in Russia, and will I have any problems with living?
Translated automatically from Russian. View original
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6 subscribers  • asked 2016-03-129 years ago
Answers  •  16
аватар ollennka
You can stay no more than 90 days in total for every 180 days. No reason is needed, just a migration card. If you need more than 90 days (for example, if you enter a university or are hired), then contact the FMS.
аватар ivancamaidanovich
Can I work at 17?
аватар ivancamaidanovich
Can I work in Russia at the age of 17?
аватар ollennka
The question, of course, is far from tourism ...
The Labor Code of the Russian Federation generally allows you to work from the age of 16, but you may have difficulties due to the lack of Russian citizenship. First, you must have a work permit yourself. Secondly, your employer must have a quota for attracting foreign workers (it is unlikely that at the age of 17 you are a highly qualified specialist for whom a quota is not required). The quota is received a year in advance, which significantly narrows the circle of job searches for you.
аватар ivancamaidanovich
Well, when I enter the campaign, will I need to make a patent in order to work at a normal job?
аватар ollennka
Well, in principle, at the age of 17, the work that you can get a job with a patent can be considered normal. But it’s better to get an education and get a really normal job.
аватар ivancamaidanovich
Can I study part-time and work at the same time?
аватар ollennka
Everything is in your hands... In my last years I managed to study full-time and work at the same time.
аватар ivancamaidanovich
How can I apply to the university of St. Petersburg if I take the EIT in Ukraine? And I read that if you get a diploma at a university, then you can apply for citizenship, or is it unlikely?
аватар ollennka
Let's round off this offtopic on a travel site. You need to go to other forums with the right topics.
аватар ivancamaidanovich
ok just answer the question
аватар kvi2007
The question is clearly not for a tourist forum! With regards to entering a Russian university with a diploma of secondary education in Ukraine (or how is it right to call it now ...?) - this is definitely not for tourists !!! If you are itching to get Russian citizenship, get married there, then get stronger for five years of naturalization (if my memory serves me right), have children, pass an exam on knowledge of the Russian language, and a bunch of all sorts of different formalities that not everyone is able to overcome! And it’s even easier to look at the request for obtaining Russian citizenship and everything will be clear and understandable to you! I doubt very much that obtaining a diploma at a Russian university gives the right to apply for citizenship!!! Otherwise, the Russian Federation would have turned into a branch of Zimbabwe, Somalia, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine and so on and so forth ....))))
аватар kvi2007
ivancamaidanovich The Law of the Russian Federation on Citizenship will answer your questions on claims for citizenship ... I think you know how to read the laws! If this is your goal in itself, I advise you to consider other options ..;) ..., the issue of legal work at the age of 17 for a citizen of Ukraine in the Russian Federation, well, don’t make the audience laugh ....)))))), of course, there are well-known options .. .., but they lie on a completely different plane from issues of legality, far from legal .....
аватар lyudmila-s-p2
The fact of the matter is that depending on what grounds you personally have for permanent residence in another state, in this case, in Russia. After all, each case is individual. There are many reasons for obtaining citizenship. You can find them on the respective websites. There is a large list of grounds for obtaining citizenship. And if you have only one desire, it is not enough. Studying in any educational institution in Russia is not a basis for obtaining citizenship.
By the way, with regard to the exam for obtaining Russian citizenship, there are not only questions on the Russian language, but many questions, in order to answer which you need to be a fairly educated and competent person. I read these questions out of curiosity. Being married to a Russian for 15 years and having lived in Russia for 10 years, I had the right to apply for Russian citizenship, but I did not want to. Therefore, I am familiar with this issue.
You are given very smart and correct advice, get an education first.
аватар goga504
go to Crimea
аватар lyudmila-s-p2
Well, what are the prospects for a young 17-year-old man without education, without housing and without money in Crimea? Absolutely none. Just like in any other city. And what kind of"normal " work can we talk about? At the age of 17, without education, you can only trade on the street if the owner of the goods agrees to take on a 17-year-old seller, or work as a loader if you are strong enough, or go "to the panel", that's where they take 17-year-olds without education.
Don't do stupid things. Study, become a specialist and get a little smarter to understand that until you get a special education and become a good specialist, no one is waiting for you anywhere and you are not needed anywhere.
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