family homestay in ooty?

Posted on April 26th, 2011 by admin

Hi all..

Iam planning to visit ooty in may with family. Our group consists of 13 people. Need a decent cottage or home-stay cottage within RS.5000/day and which can accommodate us all. Thanks in advance for your help and suggestions.

Best
Vinoth

There’s a beautiful place which was used by British officers and is now converted into a hotel. The place gives you an awesome view of the village, mountains and the race course. Good service and gives you the feeling as if you’re in the early 20th century. The name’s ‘Nilgiri Hills’. It’s very close to the main Ooty bus stop. They have beautiful gardens, trees, flowers, lawns, facility to play tennis. Women and kids will fall in love with it. Only bad thing is that they serve only vegetarian food but non-veg will be served in your rooms with special request. Clean, descent place worth visiting…

what should u advise me i want to go a school in London to learn english?

Posted on April 11th, 2011 by admin

i think i want to take course of english in London for long term about 1 years i already saved enough money

information that i need to learn is here:
–which school should i choose.if anybody has gone to one of this kind of shcool,has he/she been satisfied by the school and what is the name of the school
–i dont know what kind of accommodation i choose. i actually want to live with homestay but price of homestay is too expensive for me
–how preparation should i make before go to London

i need to answers very much
thank you in advance

latest technology- -
http://itcyber.info/

What would happen to International student from EU if he got caught underage drinking in the UK?

Posted on April 2nd, 2011 by admin

Just hypothetically the person is from Czech Republic, and is 17, lives with homestay and its not me.

I think you’re wondering if the student would be kicked out of the UK – the answer is no. Removal of EU citizens is dealt with by the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006. Regulation 21 provides that an EU citizen under 18 may only be removed "on imperative grounds of public security" – plotting to blow up trains on the tube probably qualifies, underage drinking doesn’t.

Even when you’re 18 it’s difficult to remove you – your personal conduct "must represent a genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat affecting one of the fundamental interests of society". I have seen this test used to successfully remove someone who had repeatedly been convicted of dealing class A drugs.

All of the above assumes that you are "exercising treaty rights" at the time – which basically means you have to be in education or employment.

Remember though, underage drinking is not even a criminal offence in the UK. Buying alcohol underage is, but the police tend to target the retailers rather than 17 year old consumers!

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