ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

Popular restaurateurs allowed to stay in New Zealand

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 17 Apr 2019, 6:10pm
Nataliya Shchetkova and her family run La Vista in St Heliers. (Photo / Brett Phibbs)
Nataliya Shchetkova and her family run La Vista in St Heliers. (Photo / Brett Phibbs)

Popular restaurateurs allowed to stay in New Zealand

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 17 Apr 2019, 6:10pm

A Ukrainian family who own a popular Auckland restaurant have received a reprieve from the threat of deportation after the intervention of Associate Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi.

Nataliya Shchetkova, her husband Alex Derecha and their three children are in New Zealand on a entrepreneur visa which runs out on July 1.

The couple, who run La Vista restaurant in St Heliers, have been living on a knife edge after exhausting almost all their options in a bid to stay in New Zealand, which has been their home since 2013.

They renewed their visa twice, the maximum number of times it can be renewed, and applied for residency but it was declined because Immigration NZ said their business did not add significant value to the country.

An appeal also failed.

The family's last option was to write to Faafoi. A petition signed by 15,000 people also urged Faafoi to intervene and a rally was held for the family.

Shchetkova also appeared before a parliamentary committee to plead their case.

La Vista had a turnover of $1.6 million in the last financial year and employs 26 staff, 17 of them fulltime.

Act leader David Seymour, who has been supporting the family, said today that Faafoi had written to the family to tell them they were allowed to stay for another 12 months which would allow them to apply for residency again.

"New Zealanders rallied behind the Shchetkovas because they could sense the deep injustice of the situation," Seymour said.

"The family made New Zealand their home six years ago, built a successful business employing 26 people, and now have strong connections in their community. As a country, we must be welcoming of hardworking and entrepreneurial migrants," he said.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you