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What Do Countries Do With Criminal Record Info Disclosed During A Visa Application?
If you disclose a criminal record when applying for a visa to another country, what happens to that information? Does it get added to that country's equivalent of the Police National Computer, or would it simply be used to determine if the applicant is eligible for a visa?
Also, would the details be shared with other countries or is there any kind of privacy act in place that prevents that from happening?
Also, would the details be shared with other countries or is there any kind of privacy act in place that prevents that from happening?
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No best answer has yet been selected by jecholmes. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are remarkably few countries which actually ask any questions about criminal convictions. Assuming that you hold a British (or other EU) passport you can travel visa-free throughout the whole of the EU. Most other countries popular with tourists either don't require a visa or don't ask about criminal convictions when you apply for one.
The principal exceptions are the USA (which shares its criminal intelligence system with Canada and, I believe, Mexico) and Australia (which, to the best of my knowledge, doesn't share information directly with any other countries).
However, as TonyV indicates, on the rare indications that travellers are required to disclose criminal convictions, it's a matter for the individual country to decide what to do with the information. In many countries though, immigration staff are actually specialist police officers, so information gathered for immigration purposes might well be added to a local database of criminal convictions.
The principal exceptions are the USA (which shares its criminal intelligence system with Canada and, I believe, Mexico) and Australia (which, to the best of my knowledge, doesn't share information directly with any other countries).
However, as TonyV indicates, on the rare indications that travellers are required to disclose criminal convictions, it's a matter for the individual country to decide what to do with the information. In many countries though, immigration staff are actually specialist police officers, so information gathered for immigration purposes might well be added to a local database of criminal convictions.
You can check the entry requirements for any country in the world (for British passport holders) here:
https:/ /www.go v.uk/fo reign-t ravel-a dvice
https:/
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