Quizzes & Puzzles47 mins ago
Identifying Someone For Passport
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The form said, the person needs to be 18 or over, hold a current passport, and not live at the same address as the applicant or be related to them, so I chose a person who qualified for all those things, but the person I chose was not accepted for some reason, but of course they don't give the reason why
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https:/ /www.go v.uk/co untersi gning-p assport -applic ations
They may not fall into one of those categories
https:/
They may not fall into one of those categories
When I first applied for a passport back in the 1970s I recall the list of persons who could countersign a passport application was even more restrictive – from memory it was limited to the following: The Queen, a Doctor, an MP, a Magistrate or a Police Officer.
Fortunately a work colleague who was a Doctor (not of medicine) countersigned my application.
Fortunately a work colleague who was a Doctor (not of medicine) countersigned my application.
Off topic slightly, by coincidence there's an interesting article in this month's The Oldie magazine about the old British Visitors Passport. Introduced in 1961, it was discontinued at the end of 1995. You could just roll up at a Post Office (with a passport photo and valid ID) and they would write you one there and then. It was however only valid for visits of up to 3 months duration in specified European countries and Bermuda. My very first passport was just such a document.
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