Philippine passport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Philippine passport is a travel document and is a Primary National ID issued to citizens of the Philippines. It is issued by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Philippine diplomatic missions abroad, with certain exceptions. Besides facilitating international travel and conferring diplomatic assistance to Filipinos overseas, a Philippine passport is considered a primary form of identification in the Philippines, particularly because there is no national identity card system in the country.
The passport is a popular target for counterfeiters, due largely to the relatively liberal visa requirements accorded to Philippine travelers to destinations such as Brunei, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and other APEC and ASEAN. Due to this, the Department of Foreign Affairs started issuing maroon machine-readable passport since September 17, 2007. The green colored cover non-electronic passports is still acceptable until they expire. Philippine passports are printed at the Security Plant Complex of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.
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[edit] History
Philippine passports have been issued since the Philippines gained independence from the United States, although their pre and post Spanish history is quite unknown. Passports were ordered to be printed in Filipino for the first time under Diosdado Macapagal, to be subsequently implemented under Ferdinand Marcos. Currently, it is printed in Tagalog with English translations.
With the declaration of martial law on September 23, 1972, travel restrictions were imposed on Philippine citizens. A letter of instruction on the implementation of martial law in the Philippines restricted the issuance of passports to members of the Philippine diplomatic service, although this was relaxed starting in 1981 with the lifting of martial law. With the institution of the 1987 constitution, the power of issuing passports was transferred from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the current Department of Foreign Affairs.
On May 1, 1995, green covers were instituted on regular passports for the first time, and barcodes were inserted on passports starting in 2004. The new security-enhanced passport is a prerequisite to the issuance of new machine-readable passports which was issued starting September 17, 2007.[1] The Philippines used to be one of the few countries in the world and formerly the only country in Southeast Asia that did not issue machine-readable regular passports,[2] although machine-readable official passports have been issued since June 18, 2007.[3]
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, passports were stamped with limitations prohibiting travel to South Africa (because of apartheid) and Lebanon (because of the civil war). Currently, passports are stamped prohibiting travel to Iraq due to the ongoing violence and because of the Angelo de la Cruz kidnapping.
[edit] Machine-readable passports
In 2006, the DFA in cooperation with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas started a five-year passport modernization project designed to issue new Philippine machine-readable passports (MRP). However, an injunction was issued against the project by a lower court, only to be overturned by the Supreme Court and ordering the DFA and the BSP to continue the project.
The new machine-readable passport is designed to prevent tampering through the use of a special features embedded in the passport cover, similar to other machine-readable passports. It will also have more pages than a current passport (44 pages instead of the present 32) and processing and releasing times are expected to be accelerated.
It is also believed that Philippine machine-readable passports will be used in the fight against terrorism. Because of this, personal appearance for applying the new MRP passport is now required and cannot be bypassed. Also, fingerprints are registered into passport and microprinting is found all over the data page of the passport.
[edit] Types of passports
There are only four types of Philippine passports designated by the colors maroon (regular), dark blue (diplomatic) and red (official) and light blue.
[edit] Regular/Diplomatic/Official passport (maroon)
A regular passport is issued to any citizen of the Philippines applying for a Philippine passport. It is the most common type of passport issued and is used for all travel by Philippine citizens and non-official travel by Philippine government officials. Starting September 17, 2007, new machine-readable regular passports will be made available to the general public due to rapidly-depleting stocks of regular green passports.[3].
A diplomatic passport is issued to members of the Philippine diplomatic service, members of the Cabinet, service attachés of other government agencies assigned to Philippine diplomatic posts abroad and Philippine delegates to international and regional organizations. It is the first of two passports issued to the President of the Philippines and the Presidential family. This passport used to have a dark blue cover and extends to the bearer the privilege of diplomatic immunity.
An official passport is issued to members of the Philippine government for use on official business, as well as employees of Philippine diplomatic posts abroad who are not members of the diplomatic service. It is the second of two passports issued to the President and the Presidential family. As such, this passport does not extend the privilege of diplomatic immunity. Government officials are prohibited from using official passports for non-official business, and as such also have regular green passports. This passport used to have a red cover.
[edit] Seaman's Identification Record Book (light blue)
A Seaman's Identification Record Book (SIRB) is issued to Filipinos who work as crewmembers on foreign-registered ships, as well as Philippine-registered ships with a weight over 35 gross tons. This type of passport is not issued by the DFA but by the Maritime Industry Authority (MARINA), and as such is unavailable outside the Philippines. There are special requirements for this type of passport, including certification by the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) and other agencies. This passport has a light blue cover.
[edit] Physical appearance
A Philippine passport has a maroon cover with the coat of arms of the Philippines emblazoned in the center. The cover contains the Filipino words "PILIPINAS" on top and "PASAPORTE" on the bottom. Passports issued in the late Marcos era (1980-1986) had the order reversed (strikingly similar to the United States passport), with "PASAPORTE" on top and "REPUBLIKA NG PILIPINAS" on the bottom. A typical passport has 44 (previously 32 or 64) pages.
[edit] Languages
Philippine passports are issued in both English and Filipino, with Filipino preceding English. All text in Filipino in brown passports were written with diacritics included, although diacritics are no longer used in green and maroon passports.
The information on a passport's data page are written in English.
[edit] Data page
Philippine passports have different styles of data pages. Old brown passports have both a data and physical description page, with the picture located on the description page rather than the data page, which are separated by the passport note. Green passports issued before 2004 have the data page on the inner cover followed by the passport note page. Passports issued after 2004 have the passport note and data pages reversed, with the passport note on the inner cover page.
The data page contains the following information:
- Passport type (P)
- Country code (PHL)
- Passport number
- Passport numbers vary with each type of passport. Brown passports have a letter followed by six numbers, while green passports issued before 2005 have two letters followed by six numbers. Passports issued after 2005 have two letters followed by seven numbers.
- Names
- A bearer's last name goes first, followed by the first names and middle name (mother's maiden last name)
- Nationality (Filipino)
- Date of birth (written in the European date format with months abbreviated)
- Sex (M or F)
- Date of issue
- Date of expiry
- A Philippine passport is valid for five years from the date of issue. Passports issued from 1981 to 1986 were valid for two years and may be extended for another two years.
- Issuing authority
- Valid issuing authorities for Philippine passports include the main office of the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila, branch offices of the DFA located in certain cities around the Philippines, and Philippine embassies and consulates.
With new maroon-covered passports, the passport data page ends with the Machine Readable Zone. This zone is absent in green-covered passports.
Philippine passports are known for having data entries written by hand rather than typed or computerized, although this is common only for passports issued in the Philippines. This practice is called "scripting" by the DFA. Passports issued by Philippine diplomatic missions typically have data entries typed rather than written. Machine-readable passports have their entries entered by computer.
[edit] Passport Note
The passports contain a note from the issuing state that is addressed to the authorities of all other states, identifying the bearer as a citizen of that state and requesting that he or she be allowed to pass and be treated according to international norms. The note inside all Philippine passports state:
in Filipino:
-
- "Ang Pamahalaan ng Republika ng Pilipinas ay humihiling sa lahat na kinauukulan na pahintulutan ang pinagkalooban nito, isang mamamayan ng Pilipinas, na makaraan nang malaya at walang sagabal, at kung kailangan, ay pag-ukulan siya ng lahat ng tulong at proteksyon ayon sa batas."
and in English:
-
- "The Government of the Republic of the Philippines requests all concerned authorities to permit the bearer, a citizen of the Philippines, to pass safely and freely and in case of need to give him/her all lawful aid and protection."
The note is first written in Filipino, and is then repeated in English. A field where the bearer must sign the passport appears below the note, although this appeared below the data page in old brown passports. A Philippine passport is invalid if the passport is not signed. Persons too young to sign a passport may have a parent or legal guardian sign the passport on their behalf. The signature field is absent in machine-readable passports, a source of much controversy as Filipinos applying for foreign visas, whether for travel or employment, have either been requested to get a copy of their passport application form,[4] or denied altogether.
[edit] Fees
A regular Philippine passport costs 500 pesos ($10) in the Philippines or $50 abroad. Overtime processing for new passports costs an additional 250 pesos. Persons who take advantage of overtime processing get their passports within seven days, but is only available in the Philippines. Passports previously could amended for 100 pesos ($2) in the Philippines or $20 abroad, although machine-readable passports are no longer amendable.
Lost or stolen passports may be replaced for 700 pesos ($14 in the Philippines, $90 abroad).
A Seaman's Identification Record Book may be obtained from MARINA for 550 pesos. An additional 220 pesos is added for expedited service. An SIRB may also be revalidated for 330 pesos, with an additional 120 pesos for expedited service.
[edit] Visa-free travel
Philippine passports are not valid for any travel to Iraq. Subject to deployment bans imposed by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, Philippine passports are not valid for travel to Afghanistan, Lebanon and Nigeria for employment purposes.
[edit] Africa
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Burkina Faso | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for XOF10,000 [1] |
Burundi | visa issued upon arrival [2] |
Cape Verde | visa issued upon arrival [3] |
Comoros | visa issued upon arrival [4] |
Djibouti | 10-day visa issued upon arrival for DJF3,000; 1-month visa issued upon arrival for DJF5,000 [5] |
Egypt (South Sinai only) | 14-day visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [6] |
Kenya | 3-month visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [7] |
Madagascar | 90-day visa issued upon arrival for MGA28,000 [8] |
Morocco | 3 months [9] |
Mozambique | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$25 [10] |
Niger | 1-month visa issued upon arrival for XOF25,000 [11] |
Saint Helena | visa issued upon arrival |
Seychelles | 1 month [12] |
Tanzania | visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [13] |
Togo | 7-day visa issued upon arrival [14] |
Uganda | 6-month visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [15] |
Zambia | visa issued upon arrival for US$25 (single), US$40 (double), and US$80 (multiple) [16] |
[edit] Asia
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
[edit] ASEAN |
|
Brunei Darussalam | 14 days [17] |
Cambodia | 21 days [18] |
Indonesia | 30 days [19] |
Laos | 30 days [20] |
Malaysia | 1 month [21] |
Singapore | 30 days [22] |
Thailand | 30 days [23] |
Vietnam | 21 days [24] |
[edit] Non-ASEAN |
|
Armenia | 21-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [25] |
Azerbaijan | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$100 [26] |
Bangladesh | 90-day visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [27] |
Georgia | 3 month visa issued on arrival for US$10 ~ US$200 [28] |
Hong Kong | 14 days [29] |
India | 30 days (for diplomatic passports only) [30] |
Iran | 17-day visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [31] |
Israel | 3 months [32] |
South Korea (Jeju Island only) | 30 days [33] |
Macau | 30 days [34] |
Maldives | 30-day visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [35] |
Mongolia | 21 days [36] |
Nepal | 60-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [37] |
Sri Lanka | 30 days [38] |
Timor-Leste | 30-day visa issued upon arrival for US$30 [39] |
[edit] Oceania
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Cook Islands | 31 days [40] |
Fiji | 6-month Visitor's Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge) [41] |
Marshall Islands | 30-day visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [42] |
Federated States of Micronesia | 30 days [43] |
Niue | 30 days [44] |
Palau | 30-day visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [45] |
Samoa | 60-day Visitor's Permit issued upon arrival (free of charge) [46] |
Tuvalu | 1-month visa issued upon arrival (free of charge) [47] |
Vanuatu | 30 days [48] |
[edit] North America
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Bermuda | 6 months [49] |
Costa Rica | 30 days [50] |
Dominica | 21 days [51] |
Haiti | 3 months [52] |
Saint Kitts and Nevis | 14 days [53] |
Saint Lucia | 6-week visa issued upon arrival for US$50 [54] |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 1 month [55] |
Turks and Caicos Islands | 30 days [56] |
[edit] South America
Countries and Territories | Conditions of access |
---|---|
Bolivia | 59 days [57] |
Brazil | 90 days [58] |
Colombia | 90 days [59] |
Ecuador | 90 days [60] |
Peru | 90 days [61] |
Suriname | 120 days [62] |
[edit] References
- ^ Old RP passports out, new hi-tech passports in, ABS-CBN News and Current Affairs, August 16, 2007
- ^ DFA: ‘RP passport exposes Filipinos to discrimination’, Philippine Daily Inquirer, March 13, 2007
- ^ a b DFA issues machine-readable passports to govt execs, Philippine Daily Inquirer, July 13, 2007
- ^ Passport system causing visa applicants, travel agents headaches, The Philippine Star, May 2, 2008
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Guidelines on how to apply for a Philippine passport
- Application form for Philippine passports (Front Page)