http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/10/29/003.html

 


http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/10/29/003.html 

Monday, October 29, 2007. Page 1. 

 <javascript:window.print();> Print <javascript:window.print();>  |  
<javascript:window.close();>
Close <javascript:window.close();> 
Text size: Aa <javascript:changeFontSize('8pt');>  Aa 
<javascript:changeFontSize('10pt');>  Aa
<javascript:changeFontSize('12pt');>  

Foreigners Face a 10-Day Wait for New Visas

By Alexander Osipovich and Svetlana Osadchuk 
Staff Writers 

The minimum wait time for a new Russian visa has risen to 10 days at many 
embassies in Europe where
expatriates previously could get them in just a day.

The consulates in Tallinn and Riga, once popular destinations for expats on 
visa runs, said Friday
that U.S. and British citizens must now wait 10 days to receive any kind of 
visa.

"I'm in shock," said Paul Goncharoff, a Moscow-based U.S. businessman who 
learned of the change last
week as he prepared to make what had become his annual trip to the Latvian 
capital for a new visa.

The consulates in Paris and Berlin have also slowed down processing to 10 days, 
according to visa
agencies and foreign businessmen familiar with the situation. Repeated phone 
calls to the consulates
were not answered Friday.

But the consulates in Madrid and London are apparently still offering one-day 
turnaround.

"Unfortunately, different consulates are doing it differently," said Tatyana 
Bondareva, general
director of the Visa Delight agency.

The longer waiting times stem from an agreement between Russia and the European 
Union that was meant
to simplify visa procedures and went into effect in June. "The agreement says 
consulates have up to
10 days to issue the visa," Bondareva said. "But some consulates have taken 
that to mean a set
period of 10 days."

The agreement also has lengthened waits because of a provision that has changed 
the process for
issuing invitations, Bondareva said. According to that provision, any Russian 
company can now write
a letter of invitation, a document that has always been required for a 
foreigner to obtain a visa.
Previously, such invitations could only be issued by the Federal Migration 
Service after the service
got a request from an organization authorized to invite foreigners.

The problem, Bondareva said, is that consulates now have to do the work of 
verifying the facts on
the letter of invitation, a task that was previously done by the migration 
service. 

London and Madrid may be among the bright spots for expatriates in Europe. An 
employee who answered
the phone at the Russian Embassy in Madrid said the consulate was still 
offering 24-hour and
three-day processing there. At the London embassy, a man who answered the phone 
said most visas were
taking about a week to process and asked a reporter to call back for more 
information. Nobody
answered repeated phone calls afterward. But visitors to the expat web site 
RedTape.ru said the
embassy was still offering expedited processing.

Repeated phone calls were not answered Friday at the consulates in Berlin, 
Paris, Rome, Prague,
Warsaw, New York and Washington. The consulates in Kiev, Vilnius and Brussels 
were closed Friday
afternoon. A spokesman for the Foreign Ministry said requests for comment had 
to be submitted in
writing. Questions sent by fax were not answered as of Sunday.

The EU-Russia visa agreement is the reason behind another change that has 
caused anxiety in the
expat community: a new requirement that foreigners who enter Russia on 
multiple-entry business visas
stay for no longer than 90 days at a time, and for no more than 180 days out of 
one year. In the
past, such visas could be used to stay in Russia year-round.

Bondareva said the EU-Russia agreement had made things easier despite the 
longer waiting times.

"It has become simpler," she said. "The inviting party just writes a letter, in 
a certain format,
saying that some person needs a visa, and he will get that visa. But maybe not 
as fast as he wants
it."

 

 

<<image001.gif>>

<<image002.gif>>

_______________________________________________
Expat mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.lists.ru/mailman/listinfo/expat
http://www.expat.ru/forum/

Reply via email to