Albert Buitenhuis: South African chef faces expulsion from New Zealand for being too fat
A South African chef living in New Zealand has been told by authorities he is too fat to be allowed to live in the country.
Immigration officials said Albert Buitenhuis, who weighs 286 lbs, did not have “an acceptable standard of health”.
Albert Buitenhuis now faces expulsion despite shedding 66 lbs since he moved to the city of Christchurch six years ago.
New Zealand has one of the highest obesity rates in the developed world, with nearly 30% of people overweight.
Albert Buitenhuis and his wife, Marthie, moved from South Africa to Christchurch in 2007. At the time, the chef weighed 352 lbs.
Until now, their annual work visas had been renewed with “very little problem”, his wife said.
“We applied year after year and there were no issues,” she said.
“They never mentioned Albert’s weight or his health once and he was a lot heavier then.”
But in early May, the couple was told their work visas had been declined because of Albert Buitenhuis’s weight.
“The irony is that at the moment he weighs less than when we first arrived in New Zealand and also less than in his first medical, which was accepted by [immigration authorities],” his wife said.
The couple has appealed to New Zealand’s immigration minister, citing the chef’s recent weight loss.
An immigration spokesman said Albert Buitenhuis’s application had been rejected because his obesity put him at “significant risk” of complications including diabetes, hypertension and heart disease.
“It is important that all migrants have an acceptable standard of health to minimize costs and demands on New Zealand’s health services,” he said.