From the BBC:
"Who, what, why: When can you legally travel without a passport?"
Fugitive Edward Snowden is hoping to
get to Ecuador, despite not having a valid passport. So when can you legally
travel without one? The US state department has revoked Snowden's passport and asked other
countries to prevent him from travelling. Wanted on espionage charges, the American flew from Hong Kong to Moscow on 23
June - using his US passport, according to one of his lawyers - and has applied
for asylum in Ecuador. On Monday, a seat was booked in his name on a flight to Cuba, but he was not
seen on board. A passport is usually a condition of international travel, so under what
circumstances can one travel without one? According to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, Snowden has a "special refugee
travel document" issued by Ecuador. Millions of refugees cross borders without passports as they flee persecution
or fighting. In 2012, more than seven million people became refugees, according
to the United Nations. Without passports, people would be expected to present some other form of
identification, says Larry Yungk, a UNHCR resettlement officer. Some refugees
can be registered at a border with no identification at all.
The Answer:
- Refugees cross borders with other forms of identification or none at all
- The US issues 60,000 I-94 documents a year to refugees without passports
- Consulates provide papers for people who have lost passports abroad
- National ID cards are acceptable for travel between certain countries
- The British Queen has no passport
"It's really up to the receiving country whether they
wish to accept someone into their country without a passport," says Lavinia
Limon, president and chief executive officer of the US Committee for Refugees
and Immigrants. The US admits about 60,000 refugees a year from all over the world, she says,
and only a handful have passports. They are each interviewed overseas face-to-face by officials from the
Department of Homeland Security to establish whether they are genuine refugees
and meet admission criteria. A document called an I-94 is issued in lieu of a passport and travel to the
US is arranged for each one. Other countries such as the UK and Canada issue similar documents, as does
the International Red Cross. You can also travel without a passport if it is stolen or lost while
abroad. "You can hang around for days waiting for a new passport," says Simon Calder,
travel editor of the Independent newspaper. "Or you can get on a plane with
something from your consulate that says 'this person is OK, let him or her take
a one-way flight to their destination.' "But it's rare and any kind of document like that is a get-out-of-jail-free
card - go straight to your destination and don't mess around." There are also special relationships between countries that entitle their
citizens to travel between them without a passport. For example, US citizens can travel to US territories like Puerto Rico and
Guam with approved photo ID. Beyond that, Americans always need a passport to travel by air, although US
and Canadian citizens can visit each other's countries with pre-approved Nexus
cards. There are some exceptions to the mandatory passport rule
if American citizens are visiting other North American countries by land or sea,
according to the US
State Department website. So if they are going to the Caribbean or Bermuda, for example, then a
passport card, rather than the passport book, will be accepted. And an enhanced
driving licence or military identification can also be sufficient. The UK and the Republic of Ireland have formed the Common Travel Area, in
which photo ID is usually sufficient for citizens of both countries. Immigration
officers can ask for proof of nationality, so government advice is to carry one.
In 1995, 26 European countries formed the Schengen area of free travel
without border controls. But passenger carriers such as airlines can still
impose identity checks that may include a passport. National identity cards are also accepted in place of passports for member
countries of some regional alliances. These include the Economic Community of West African States, the European
Union and some neighbouring countries, the Cooperation Council for the Arab
States of the Gulf, and Mercosur in South America. Not that Queen Elizabeth II has ever to worry about carrying one. As the
person who
officially issues them, she is the only Briton who is exempt.
^ This wasn't the article I thought I was going to read, but it is still a good one. I have been against the US requiring American citizens to have a passport to leave or enter the country since it first started. I think Passport Cards and Enhanced Driver's Licenses are enough to prove your citizenship and are less expensive than a regular Passport and should be allowed for: land, sea or air. The US Government says that the Passport Cards aren't allowed for international air travel due to international regulations. This doesn't make any sense since EU citizens can travel around Europe (by land, sea or air) with their national ID cards and the Passport Card has all the same identifying columns -including stating citizenship. I have had regular Passport since I was a baby and believe you should always have a valid one so I usually use that when traveling - whether by land, sea or air - although last June I used my Passport Card to re-enter the US from Canada (traveling by card) just to see if it would work since had never tried the Card before. It did. As for not needing a Passport to go to the US territories (ie Puerto Rico, Guam, US Virgin Islands, etc) it makes no sense that a US citizen would ever need a Passport to go there as it is considered domestic travel (unless you go through another country.) I know some countries (ie the Netherlands, UK, etc) require Passports for their citizens to travel to their own territories and I don't understand that at all. ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-23038996
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.