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Available second passport and citizenship

November 27, 2009 Leave a comment

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Taliban Open Up Front in Once-Quiet Afghan North
Nov 27, 2009 12:31 am | By CARLOTTA GALL

Militants have had a resurgence in Kunduz, a province that American and Afghan officials did not think they had to worry about.

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Stalemate in Legislature Has New York Near Its Last Dollar
Nov 26, 2009 11:39 pm | By DANNY HAKIM

With no end in sight to a dispute over a budget deficit, the state could have as little as $36 million in the bank by year end.

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राष्ट्रमंडल सम्मेलन में ध्यान जलवायु परिवर्तन पर
Nov 26, 2009 09:54 pm | BBC Hindi

शुक्रवार से शुरु हो रहे राष्ट्रमंडल सम्मेलन में जलवायु परिवर्तन छाया रहेगा. अन्य नेताओं समेत मनमोहन सिंह भी वहाँ पहुँचे हैं.

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Торги на Токийской бирже начались с обвала котировок
Nov 26, 2009 09:05 pm | “Ведомости”. Ежедневная деловая газета

Сегодня утром торги на крупнейшей в Азии Токийской фондовой бирже начались с обвала котировок из-за ослабления доллара.

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Grande-Marlaska prohíbe dos homenajes a etarras
Nov 26, 2009 08:59 pm | Los Angeles

El juez de la Audiencia Nacional ordena también que se retire una placa en recuerdo a dos terroristas de la banda.  Leer. Escuchar

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São Paulo registra mais de 100 km de filas às 21h30
Nov 26, 2009 07:44 pm | G1 – O Portal de Notícias da Globo

Capital teve 21 pontos de alagamentos, segundo CGE. Chove moderamente em vários pontos da cidade.

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Барак Обама попросил американцев потерпеть
Nov 26, 2009 06:39 pm | “Ведомости”. Ежедневная деловая газета

Американский президент в своем обращении к нации призвал всех граждан государства к терпению в связи с тяжелым экономическим положением в стране.

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Troops celebrate Thanksgiving
Nov 26, 2009 06:35 pm | CNN.com – U.S.

Turkey, stuffing, pumpkin pie, a visit by the commanding general in Iraq and a phone call from President Obama, were some of the ways the White House and Pentagon helped U.S. troops overseas celebrate Thanksgiving.

cnn_us?d=yIl2AUoC8zA cnn_us?d=7Q72WNTAKBA cnn_us?i=i_Dq37gfmMo:-uK-mdtxRI0:V_sGLiPBpWU cnn_us?d=qj6IDK7rITs cnn_us?i=i_Dq37gfmMo:-uK-mdtxRI0:gIN9vFwOqvQ
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Jockeys’ Fire Deaths: Man On Murder Charge
Nov 26, 2009 06:28 pm | Sky News | Home | First For Breaking News

A 37-year-old man has been charged with the murders of two young jockeys who died in a fire at a flat.

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Guerra se desmarca de la cúpula del PSOE y censura las «presiones» al TC
Nov 26, 2009 06:00 pm | RSS Agregación ABC

-ABOR24_alfonsoguerra--300x180.JPGHeridas abiertas entre los cargos socialistas, de la vieja y nueva guardia, ante la inminente sentencia del Tribunal Constitucional (TC) sobre el recurso interpuesto por el PP en julio de 2006 contra el «Estatut» de Cataluña. La publicación hoy de un editorial consensuado por doce periódicos catalanes -al que se han adherido posteriormente tres emisoras de la misma región- ha desatado una oleada de comentarios y críticas, pronunciados de forma soterrada y también a micrófono abierto.

Guerra se desmarca. El presidente de la Comisión Constitucional del Congreso, el socialista Alfonso Guerra, …

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Militants have had a resurgence in Kunduz, a province that American and Afghan officials did not think they had to worry about.

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November 5, 2009 1 comment

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Second passport and citizenship program from Macedonia

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment

 

Macedonia, officially the Republic of Macedonia, is a country in the central Balkan peninsula in southeastern Europe.It is one of the successor states of the former Yugoslavia, from which it declared independence in 1991. It was admitted to the United Nations in 1993, but as a result of a dispute with Greece over its name, it was admitted under the provisional reference of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia,sometimes abbreviated as FYROM.
macedoniaFor further information on the country please click the link below: Macedonia

Benefits of the passport:

Enjoying visa free travel to many countries. No visa required (or issued upon arrival)
Easy employment in many countries.
Obtaining residency in many countries.
Full benefits of citizenship all over the world.
Signing contracts with western or European companies.
Opening saving or current accounts with international banks and applying for loans, credit, etc.

Required documents:

Passport scan
Signature scan (On white background)
2 photos of you with different style. passport size photo with white background
Filling our data form (will be sent to you upon request)
Note:all the above documents should be scanned with high quality and resolution (500Kb) and sent through e-mail.
Note:we are able to send you 2 types of documents. Each has different advantages.
Type 1: national ID card and passport of Macedonia will be printed with your name and data and there is no record in the Macedonia government database. But the material is 100% genuine.
In this system because you travel with both your original passport and Macedonia passport and the data is same then you won’t face any problems and both passports match.
Type 2: national ID card and passport of Macedonia will be printed with a local person’s data matching your date of birth and with your photo. The material is 100% genuine and the record exist in the government database and can be checked anywhere.
In this system you can’t travel with both your original passport and Macedonia passport. You can only use your Macedonia passport.
This type of documents are well used between company managers and CEOs who have problem signing contracts with western or European companies, applying for company or personal loans from international banks, company registration and etc. with their current citizenship.
Note: for the customers who need stronger documents we have arranged to obtain a powerful Asian country’s residency in your new passport. We will also open anew bank account for you using your new passport. So you will be confident using your documents knowing that they have been approved by a third party government also.

Documents that you will receive:

maccedonia passport
Macedonia passport
Macedonia national ID card

Processing time:

We will need 45-60 days from you but our customers usually receive their documents in 30-45 days.

Processing fee:

The total fee for both types of documents is 10,500 Euro which is payable in 3 steps:
4,000 Euro starting fee;
3,000 Euro after receiving the scan of your documents;
3,500 euro after receiving you documents;
Here is the list of countries that is visa –free for Macedonia passport:

Europe

European Union (Schengen countries): 90 days
Albania: 60 days
Bosnia and Herzegovina: 3 months
Croatia: 3 months
Kosovo: 90 days
Montenegro: 60 days
Serbia: 60 days
Russia: 30 days
Turkey: 2 months

Africa

Botswana: 90 days
Comoros: visa issued upon arrival
Djibouti: 1 month visa issued upon arrival
Egypt: 1 month visa issued upon arrival
Ethiopia: 3 months visa issued upon arrival
Kenya: 3 months visa issued upon arrival
Lesotho: 14 days
Madagascar: 90 days visa issued upon arrival
Malawi: 90 days
Mauritius: 6 months
Mayotte: 90 days
Morocco: 3 months
Mozambique: 30 days visa issued upon arrival
Namibia: 3 months
Réunion: unlimited access
Saint Helena: 90 days
Senegal: 3 months
Seychelles: 1 month
South Africa: 90 days
Swaziland: visa available on arrival
Tanzania: visa issued upon arrival
Togo: 7 days visa issued upon arrival
Tunisia: 4 months
Uganda: visa issued upon arrival
Zambia: visa issued upon arrival
Zimbabwe: 3 months visa issued upon arrival

Americas

Argentina: 3 months
Bahamas: 3 months
Barbados: 28 days
Cuba: 90 days
Dominica: 21 days
Dominican Republic: 30 days
Ecuador: 90 days
El Salvador: 3 months
Guatemala: 90 days
Haiti: 3 months
Honduras: 3 months
Nicaragua: 3 months
Peru: 90 days
Saint Kitts and Nevis: 14 days
Saint Lucia: 6 weeks visa available on arrival
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: 1 month

Asia

Armenia: 120 days visa issued on arrival
Azerbaijan: 30 days visa issued on arrival
Bangladesh: 90 days visa issued on arrival
Cambodia: 30 days visa issued on arrival
Georgia: 360 days visa issued on arrival
Hong Kong: 14 days
Iran: 3 months
Israel: 3 months
Japan: 3 months
Laos: 30 days visa issued on arrival
Lebanon: 3 months visa issued on arrival
Macau: 30 days visa issued on arrival
Malaysia: 1 month
Maldives: 30 days
Mongolia: visa issued on arrival
Nepal: 15/30/90 days visa issued on arrival
Oman: 1 month visa issued on arrival
Singapore: 30 days
Sri Lanka: 30 days
Syria: 15 days visa issued on arrival
Timor-Leste: 30 days visa issued on arrival

Oceania

American Samoa: 30 days
Australia Electronic: Travel Authority
Norfolk Island: Electronic Travel Authority
Fiji: 4 months
French Polynesia: 90 days
Guam: 90 days
Kiribati: 28 days
Marshall Islands: 30 days visa issued upon arrival
Federated States of Micronesia: 30 days
New Caledonia: 90 days
Northern Mariana Islands: 30 days
Cook Islands: 31 days
Niue: 30 days
Palau: 30 days visa issued upon arrival
Papua New Guinea: 90 days visa issued upon arrival
Samoa: 60 days
Solomon Islands: 3 months
Tonga: 31 days
Tuvalu: 1 month visa issued upon arrival
Vanuatu: 30 days
Wallis and Futuna: 90 days

 

Second Passports through Adoption or Marriage

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment

Second Passports through Adoption

An unusual route to some first-world passports
One somewhat unorthodox way of getting a second passport is through adoption. Despite what you might think, this is not an option only available to the very young.
adoptionIn some coutries, persons of any age can be legally adopted by a willing (and presumably economically rewarded) family. As there is apparently no age restriction on this procedure, it is possible to be adopted by a parent half your age.
Naturally, the process requires careful professional handling and observance of the law in the two jurisdictions, both the applicant’s and the adoptive parents’. The procedure is carried out with the full knowledge and assistance of the relevant authorities.
Second Passports through Marriage

For the sake of completness

For the sake of completeness, it should be mentioned that there are nations that will give instant citizenship and a passport upon marriage to a local citizen (in contrast to many that will just offer residency, with passport to follow in a few years’ time).
In any case, the author does not wish to advocate the use of marriage as a means of obtaining a second passport. Marriage was invented to serve a different purpose all together.
marriage

Second Passport through Ancestral or Ethic Connection

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment
Second Passports through Ancestral or Ethic Connection

Sometimes surprisingly easy and quick
grandparentsObtaining a passport on the basis of ancestry is a common route; having parents each with a different nationality will often enable a child to claim dual citizenship. This is common and widely understood.
However, what is worth noting here is that numerous countries have legislation which enables a second passport seeker to exploit a much farther ancestral connection than one that goes back just a generation or two. This is the case in countries as disparate as Latvia, Israel, Germany and Spain.
Some countries’ legislation takes the ancestral connection yet further. To give an example, those with indigenous Jewish connection may take up Israeli citizenship — this is not unusual. However, under certain circumstances, some can even become citizens of Germany or Spain — by taking advantage of legislation designed in response to the Holocaust and the Spanish Inquisition of the 15th century.
History throws up some fascinating opportunities if only you know where to look. There must be millions of people worldwide who could probably claim an instant second passport of one country or another on the basis of their origin alone — regardless of which country they call their own now.
It must be noted here that obtaining a second passport through ancestry is not in itself a route to lower taxation or other freedoms if your original nation still can hold claim over you.
For example, one Norman Dacey, author of “How To Avoid Probate”, chose to obtain Irish nationality on the basis that he could claim ancestry there.
Dacey duly moved to Ireland some years ago and declared himself an Irish citizen. The Internal Revenue Service of the United States however saw things differently and confiscated royalties even though Dacey had been outside of the USA and held an Irish passport. Formal renunciation of US citizenship at the US embassy quickly followed.

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Passports by Discretion and unpublished programs – Second passport

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment

 

Passports by Discretion and Unpublished Programs

Typically the best there is — if you can get it
We have available some very attractive citizenship program which make you eligible for passport, national ID and driving licence
Citizenship, passports and indeed honorary diplomatic appointments and diplomatic passports are often granted without the need for specific economic citizenship legislation. Many nations have provisions in their laws that allow the granting of citizenship by discretion or rather at the simple behest of a government ministry.
Even the United States and Great Britain routinely grant citizenship and passports to persons whom they believe may be of value and who will benefit the nation. The same is true of course for many other nations around the world. In these cases, each applicant is considered individually and not as part of any collective policy decision by a government. Knowing the right people to approach is of course vital.
This brings us to another class of second passport program that, in a way, is a combination of an economic citizenship scheme and the discretionary approach.
Such schemes seek to attract investors not through economic citizenship legislation as such, but rather via the discretionary approach described above. To qualify, an investment in a government-approved business is usually required. This, in turn, is considered to be of a sufficient “benefit for the nation” for the relevant government department to exercise its “discretion” and offer the investor an instant second passport.
These programs often contain confidentiality clauses and are made available to a handful of lawyers and other trusted specialists. Nations have increasingly chosen this approach at the advice of international tax lawyers who have noted that it is in the mutual interest of the applicants and the nations alike.

 

 

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Second passport – Economic Citizenship Programs

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment

Economic Citizenship Programs:
Second Passports for Investment
Fairly hassle-free and quick option for most
Many countries have enacted legislation that allows qualified applicants to receive instant second citizenship and a passport in return for investment. Such programs are widely known and are typically aimed at individuals who wish to leave their (often repressive) country of origin and begin a new life elsewhere.
The legal process is usually simple and swift (taking as little as three months), and the attractions are numerous for many: good visa-free travel, better stability and better economic climate of their new country, lower taxes for residents, and so on. Some economic citizenship programs allow legal name change.
Countries such as St. Kitts and Nevis, Belize and Grenada all created a “citizenship industry” alongside their offshore financial sector.
The necessary level of investment typically was set at US$ 60,000 to 70,000, although once rose as high as US$ 1.5 million in the case of the (now discontinued) Irish program.
Whilst programs relying on specific economic citizenship legislation are suitable for some, their high-profile nature has discouraged others. In addition, many such schemes have now closed up shop due to domestic and international political pressures.

Economic Citizenship Programs:Second Passports for Investment
Fairly hassle-free and quick option for most
Many countries have enacted legislation that allows qualified applicants to receive instant second citizenship and a passport in return for investment. Such programs are widely known and are typically aimed at individuals who wish to leave their (often repressive) country of origin and begin a new life elsewhere.
The legal process is usually simple and swift (taking as little as three months), and the attractions are numerous for many: good visa-free travel, better stability and better economic climate of their new country, lower taxes for residents, and so on. Some economic citizenship programs allow legal name change.
Countries such as St. Kitts and Nevis, Belize and Grenada all created a “citizenship industry” alongside their offshore financial sector.
The necessary level of investment typically was set at US$ 60,000 to 70,000, although once rose as high as US$ 1.5 million in the case of the (now discontinued) Irish program.
Whilst programs relying on specific economic citizenship legislation are suitable for some, their high-profile nature has discouraged others. In addition, many such schemes have now closed up shop due to domestic and international political pressures.

Common Routes To Second Passports

November 4, 2009 Leave a comment
How do you go about getting a second passport then?
There are those lucky enough who can claim a second passport instantly and for free — such as children whose mother and father each has a different nationality.
Others, such as long-term residents of countries other than their native one, or those married to a foreign spouse, are often also entitled to a second passport. Whilst free, this is not a route that’s open to everyone for reasons of practicalities. Moreover, patience is needed: this can be a slow route, often filled with obstacles; it typically takes several years before a second passport is granted.
So is there a fast and hassle-free route to a second passport?

How do you go about getting a second passport then?
There are those lucky enough who can claim a second passport instantly and for free — such as children whose mother and father each has a different nationality.
Others, such as long-term residents of countries other than their native one, or those married to a foreign spouse, are often also entitled to a second passport. Whilst free, this is not a route that’s open to everyone for reasons of practicalities. Moreover, patience is needed: this can be a slow route, often filled with obstacles; it typically takes several years before a second passport is granted.
So is there a fast and hassle-free route to a second passport?

Second passport – Financial Privacy And Security

November 3, 2009 Leave a comment
Financial Privacy And Security
Second passports that incorporate a legal name change are used by many as the basis of their asset protection strategy.
William Godwin, a 19th-century philosopher and the husband of the author of Frankenstein, once posed a very interesting and a thought-provoking question:
“When I was born,” Godwin pondered, “did I sign any agreement by which I agreed to the terms and conditions of the laws and the government under which I now find myself ruled?”
dual citizenshipThe answer is of course no, he did not — and neither did you, nor I, nor any of those many individuals who choose to acquire a second passport and citizenship as they grow dissatisfied with the “terms and conditions” attached to their birth nationality.
This is not to suggest that there is anything wrong with national pride; however, the increasing erosion of national sovereignty by global authorities (and the emergence of a near-federal state in Europe) has dampened these emotions except amongst the mentally challenged hooligan on the football terraces.
Furthermore, government interference in its citizens affairs are at an all-time high; centralist socialist administrations need your tax revenue to fuel the human machinery (bureaucracy) by which they seek to order your lives.
A second passport has become for many the foundation stone for a permanent and absolutely secure asset protection strategy. Holding assets as a citizen and passport holder of another nation, even if under a different name, is not in itself illegal. The benefits are also permanent and absolute.
An assets strategy based upon a second nationality is not subject to the fortunes of offshore centres like the Bahamas that may or may not in the future reveal your assets to a centralised world financial authority: Even the most sophisticated and intrusive form of electronic surveillance (legal or otherwise) will be unable to thwart a simple legal procedure — a name change.