If the authorities are just looking for confirmation that you have the money, and possibly that your account have existed for so long, could you ask the bank for an official letter confirming such? It would cost money and time though.
KTC On 20/05/2015 23:47, Richard Symonds wrote: > In our case, they only wanted to see the balance, not the transaction > names. It will look odd but they're not interested in who you're paying, > only that you have the money to support the person being sent. Blacking > out all of the payee names should be quite simple if you print the > statement out and use a slip of paper to cover the payer column? > > On 20 May 2015 23:34, "Tomasz Ganicz" <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: > > If we will blacken all personal data it would look strange, as vast > majority of entries are payments to individuals or by individuals, > not mentioning it is terrible work. We had over 1000 individual > donations, around 200 membership fees payments, over 500 payments > for wikigrants, scholarships, travel reimburesements. To clean it up > it is 2 days work for one employee, and the results will be the > statement on which 90% of entries will be blackened. > > > > 2015-05-20 22:27 GMT+02:00 Schneider, Manuel > <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>: > > This is a typical requirement, the applicant should prove she/he > is able to pay for any incidents while in the country. Schengen > countries typically want to see the person has 10.000 EUR in > available. > That's why WMCH issued a guarantee of 10.000 CHF and put that > into the invitation letter. > > I would recommend to print the statements, blacken any > individual namea and fax it to the consulate. > > /Manuel > > Am 20.05.2015 22:14 schrieb Tomasz Ganicz <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]>>: > > > > Hi, > > > > We have a problem with one of our scholar, who needs a Mexican > visa. We have sent him a letter of support, but Mexican > Consulate in Rome requries from him to provide full 12 month > statesments from our accounts (Wikimedia Polska). We can't do > this as these statements contain a lot of fragile personal data > (names, home addresses and personal accounts numbers of our > scholars, members and donors). I have never heard that any other > country require such things. Does WMF scholars have similar > problems? > > > > Cheers, > > -- Katie Chan Any views or opinions presented in this e-mail are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent the view of any organisation the author is associated with or employed by. Experience is a good school but the fees are high. - Heinrich Heine --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. http://www.avast.com _______________________________________________ Wikimania-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimania-l
