Stabroek News Sunday

The daily struggle for passp

- By Dreylan Johnson

There is nothing unusual about seeing, on a typical morning, a line at the Passport Office so long it meanders around the corner of Camp, into Barrack Street. This is usually a daily occurrence, come rain or sun, and on two of the four days Stabroek News visited, the rains did indeed come.

When it started raining on Tuesday, July 12, those queued up were fortunate to be granted access to the shed for shelter. Among this group was a family of five (parents and three children, including a one year old baby girl) who had travelled all the way from the Corentyne, having been on the road since 04:00 hrs. Over three hours later, around 07:30hrs, they stood in the sun, having not brought umbrellas, the child’s topless frame bared to the heat.

The family plans to travel soon, hopefully permanentl­y, according to the father, who commented, “If a simple thing like getting a passport is hard, wah more nah gon hard?”

When the rains came on Wednesday the masses were not as fortunate. It was gathered, that because the showers occurred before the specified 07:00 hrs opening time, they were not allowed to take shelter in the shed.

They were rescued by an umbrella vendor, who had been on standby and capitalize­d on the small fortune the rains brought. That is, until he was robbed of his money by two patrons to whom he had accidental­ly given $4,000 change instead of the $400 he owed them. It had still been dark when the rains came.

If you pass by the office late enough (around 08:00 hrs) as many are in the shed as line the roadway. The shed is the first stop on your way to securing a passport.

But before one can gain entry into the shed, one must be gifted with a numbered ticket. Those with a ticket will be allowed through to process their applicatio­n. The “latecomers” form a line to write their names down in a book that will gain them first preference in processing when they return the next day.

It was on Stabroek News’ third visit that an immigratio­n officer was overheard telling a pair of women that 300 people are processed daily. It was only 08:00 hrs and the immigratio­n officer told them to return the following day as the office had reached its daily quota for processing applicatio­ns. “If you come late, you’ll have to come the next day, and if you come late tomorrow, you’ll have to come the next, and the next,” the officer advised them.

Waiting nearby was a woman, small in stature, accompanie­d by her young child. She pleaded with the officer to have some leniency with her, explaining that she had travelled from “all the way” on the East Coast.

She had left Vryheid’s Lust at 04:00 hrs on July 12 and waited three hours in line, only to be sent home for “authorizat­ion” from her husband that he was the father of their child. Tears in her eyes, she held up the letter she had returned with, explaining that she had been asked to come again the next day as she had lost her place in the queue.

She was not the only person who complained of having waited for hours before being asked to return with required documentat­ion.

When Stabroek News visited at 10:00 hrs on June 30, a mother of three disclosed that she had awakened at 03:00 hrs the day before and travelled from Berbice with her children to apply for their passports. She related that she stood in line four and a half hours, and while she was able to complete the process for them on that day, she had to return to have hers processed because she had not known that she needed her birth certificat­e.

An enquiry with the officer at the shed revealed that an ID card, filled out applicatio­n form and birth certificat­e were needed (if you had the green passport) in order to apply for a new passport. A kindly gentleman standing not far away shouted the advice to “Come 5 o’clock, or you won’t get in.”

The buddy system

Of the scores of persons Stabroek News managed to engage with, many had travelled from the Corentyne, in groups, leaving as early as 02:00 hrs and 03:00hrs to secure a place in the line. One such group, which had arrived at the Passport Office since 04:30 hrs on Wednesday July 13, had travelled from Crabwood Creek.

Others from Wakenaam, Linden, Mahaica Creek, and as close as Bent Street and Kingston. A young woman who lived close by in Kingston was there since 04:40 hrs that morning and according to her, there were at least 80100 people congregate­d already.

She related that her only purpose there was to keep a spot for her mother who was travelling all the way from Berbice and whose passport had expired. Having received number 97, she managed to push her way into the first batch of persons who were taken into the office for processing as the cut-off point was initially number 96.

She was not the only person who utilized the buddy system. For one man, however, after keeping a spot for a friend for more than two hours and making it to the came top of the line, he wa forced to rejoin the lin when she finally arrived. H was the first to relate that i had poured earlier tha morning and many wer forced into the shed to avoid getting wet. The man opined that it is “Totally ridiculou packing people in a chicken pen like that.”

Perhaps as popular as th buddy system is the trend o travelling in pairs, not sur prising given the hours o waiting that is required. Th woman from Wakenaam accompanie­d by anothe woman, said she had trav elled to Georgetown the day before on unrelated busines and decided to “kill two birds with one stone,” a travel between the two places was expensive.

Most people, when asked, said they were ther to “renew” their passport as they had intentions o travelling soon on vacation or simply wanted to “get i over with.”

Although there are no

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 ??  ?? The line at the Passport Office at 7:30hrs on July 1
The line at the Passport Office at 7:30hrs on July 1

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