International Roundup
The
Brazilian government has approved the requirement that visiting Americans must
be fingerprinted and photographed. The
requirement was initially an act of revenge by a judge who was offended by the
new US-VISIT program, which he called “Nazi-like.”
While
American visitors to Brazil will have to go through the same processing that
Brazilian visitors face when they enter the United States, the new Brazilian
rules call for the immediate installation of electronic fingerprinting equipment
and Web cameras to speed up the screening process, which Brazilian authorities
had dragged out. In a
concession to US diplomatic objections, American visitors will no longer be
called out of lines and made to stand separately and slowly processed.
The new rules also allow Brazil’s Federal Police to waive the
fingerprinting and photographing of US cruise-ship passengers if authorities as
Brazilian ports of entry cannot handle their processing.
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Over
2,000 asylum seekers from Iraq have arrived in Great Britain since last May –
about 200 a month – despite the fall of Saddam Hussein and the liberation of
Iraq last year. Home Secretary
David Blunkett has said that he would like those asylees to return home to
assist in the rebuilding of Iraq since they are no longer threatened.
The British Home Office is contemplating offering Iraqis £3,000 in
grants to get them to voluntarily return home.
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For
Jews leaving Eastern Europe, Germany has become a more popular immigration goal
than Israel. In 2002, 19,200 Jewish
Eastern European immigrants arrived in Germany, compared with the 18,000 who
went to Israel. Reasons cited for
this trend are the difficult Hebrew language, the harsh climate in Israel and
the ongoing Middle East conflict.
Since
1989, Germany’s Jewish population has increased from 30,000 to 100,000.
A 1990 German law allows Jews from Eastern Europe and the former USSR to
settle in Germany.
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Russia
has recently passed new visa and registration regulations in order to keep
closer track of foreigners, particularly those from former Soviet republics who
live and work illegally in the country.
One
of the changes in registrations was prompted by a number of cases of people
being registered in apartments where they never lived and without the knowledge
of those registered to live there. Expatriates
and tourists staying in a private apartment now need a letter of permission from
their landlord and anyone else registered in the apartment.
The landlord has to get the document officially stamped by the local
maintenance department.
Another
new registration rule requires that the registration be stamped on the migration
card people complete when arriving in Russia.
This will mean that those with business visas will have to re-register
each time they enter the country because border officials collect the migration
card when foreigners leave the country.
A foreigner working in Russia must now have a work visa and not a one-year multi-entry visa as in the past. Those with one-year multi-entry visas, which are for business travelers, can no longer stay in the country for more than 180 days at a time. This will mean that foreigners will now have to leave and then re-enter the country at least every six months. The visa is also single entry, meaning a foreigner cannot leave the country and return later on the same visa. Also, the visa requires that the holder to apply for an exit permit 45 days in advance of his planned departure.
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China
and the EU have ratified an agreement that could lead to a significant increase
in the number of Chinese tourists traveling to Europe.
In the agreement, the EU provides simplified visa procedures, especially
for Chinese tourist groups, and China grants, “approved destination status”
to EU member states, allowing tour groups to travel to China.
The agreement is trying to prevent the problem of Chinese overstays in countries Chinese citizens visit in search of illegal employment. This issue has arisen in other countries accepting Chinese tour groups. In the agreement with the EU, China agreed to take back the overstays.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.