Denmark deports top foreign student for working too hard

Copenhagen: Denmark has kicked a foreign student out of the country for exceeding hourly part-time work regulations, despite Aarhus University’s efforts to hang onto one of its top students, the school said on Friday.

Marius Youbi, a 30-year-old engineering student, flew home to Cameroon on January 7 under an expulsion order requiring him to leave Denmark by January 8.

Marius Youbi, a 30-year-old engineering student of Aarhus University, was asked to leave Denmark by January 8 for exceeding hourly part-time work regulations.

The Scandinavian country has some of Europe’s strictest immigration policies, and has repeatedly tightened its regulations in recent months to deter foreigners from seeking a new life in the country.

Working part-time as a cleaner to help pay for his studies, Youbi was found to have occasionally exceeded the 15 hours he was allowed to work per week.

“We disagree with this decision from the Danish immigration service,” university spokesman Anders Cornell told AFP.

The school’s rector sent a letter to the immigration service’s Agency for Recruitment and Integration on December 23 asking it to reconsider its decision, but the letter was not answered, Cornell said.

“Marius Youbi is one of the most talented students we have… the agency is able to reverse its decision and to not do so would be unfortunate,” rector Brian Bech Nielsen wrote in the letter, a copy of which was sent to AFP.

“The country’s laws should of course be respected, but the ‘punishment’ does not meet the ‘crime’ in this case,” he wrote.

Youbi “has paid back the money he earned for those extra hours and he paid the fine as well. The Danish immigration service therefore considers that he has accepted his penalty,” Cornell said.

A spokesman for the Danish agency, Jesper Wodschow Larsen, told AFP the decision “was taken in line with the rules in place.”

Youbi, who was studying towards a bachelor’s degree in engineering, still needs to write his thesis and do an internship with a Danish company in order to earn his degree, Cornell said.

Speaking to Danish Radio just before his departure, Youbi said he was “sad and disappointed, my work is wasted.”

“This is four-and-a-half years that have gone up in smoke. I built up something here in Denmark. I’ve made many friends here; I have family here that I’m leaving behind. It’s hard to say goodbye to so much,” he said.

Youbi said he was still hopeful he could return to Denmark to resume his studies.

“I hope I’ll be able to come back… First I’m going to go home and wait. Then I’ll hope for the best,” he said.

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