Gulf News

Bangladesh­is have 5 months to replace handwritte­n passports

AROUND 200,000 EXPATS MUST OBTAIN MACHINE READABLE DOCUMENTS BY NOVEMBER 24

- By Staff Reporter

An estimated 200,000 Bangladesh­is in the UAE must convert their handwritte­n passports to Machine Readable Passports (MRPs) in the next five months, a top Bangladesh­i diplomat has told Gulf News.

The Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO) has set a deadline of November 24, 2015 for globally phasing out all passports that are not machine readable. From November 25, government­s may deny visas or entry to any person travelling with a non-MRP.

“The Bangladesh­i diplomatic missions in the UAE have issued around 550,000 MRPs since early 2011 and we estimate that around 200,000 people remain to apply for MRPs,” Mohammad Imran, Bangladesh­i Ambassador to the UAE, said in an interview.

He said the number of Bangladesh­is in the UAE is between 700,000 and 800,000.

The envoy urged all Bangladesh­is in the UAE and their employers to ensure that all of them get MRPs at the earliest, without waiting for the last minute “because it takes six to eight weeks to issue a new passport”.

A Bangladesh­i MRP costs Dh125 for labourers and Dh405 for people in other jobs. “Although both the embassy in Abu Dhabi and the consulate in Dubai have the capacity to issue 800 passports a day, only around 500 applicants are coming in these days,” Imran said.

The Bangladesh­i Government has outsourced the passport services to a company named Iris, which has soft-launched its services at five locations in

‘Don’t wait for last minute’

He cautioned that waiting for the last minute may cause problems for those holding handwritte­n passports. “They cannot renew their UAE visas without MRP.”

As Gulf News reported, handwritte­n passport holders had already started feeling the heat in the UAE much before the internatio­nal deadline. The UAE stopped issuing new visas to Bangladesh­is holding handwritte­n passports in 2013 although renewal of their existing visa was permitted.

From September 2010, the UAE stopped issuing new visas to Pakistanis holding handwritte­n passports, although renewal of existing visas was permitted. This affects Pakistanis who travel to the UAE on visit or tourist visas and Pakistani expatriate­s already in the country who apply for a new visa.

The Pakistan Embassy earlier said that most Pakistanis had converted their old passports to MRPs. The embassy was not available for comment.

 ??  ??
 ?? Abdul Rahman/Gulf News Archives ?? Mohammad Imran
Abdul Rahman/Gulf News Archives Mohammad Imran
 ??  ?? New rules Bangladesh­i (left) and Pakistani passports. From September 2010, the UAE stopped issuing new visas to Pakistanis holding handwritte­n passports.
New rules Bangladesh­i (left) and Pakistani passports. From September 2010, the UAE stopped issuing new visas to Pakistanis holding handwritte­n passports.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates