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rrruss
Joined: 24 Jul 2006 Posts: 10
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 3:34 am Post subject: New passport, new visa? |
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Well, first the good news! With no empty pages left on my passport I sent my application and old passport off to Hong Kong. 3 weeks of nervous waiting with baited breath passed and a shiny new passport arrived by courier along with my battered old one.
Now comes the problem!
My school tells me I'm ok with the old passport and visa until it runs out on 2 April when they will have a new visa put in the new passport for me. My work permit will be transferred accordingly.
However, the British Embassy has told me that this is wrong and that I must transfer the current visa from the old passport to the new passport. My school tell me this is impossible!
Looks like my thoughts of flying to Singapore for the Hung Vuong Kings holiday at the end of the month are now in pieces. Good job I hadn't booked a flight! The school say I can leave on the old passport and come back in on the new one gaining another 3 month visa on the way (fortunately at their expense) but the Embassy has said that the old passport is now cancelled so I can't do that!
Does anyone have any experience in this sort of situation???
Heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeelp!!!!!
Russ |
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ExpatLuke
Joined: 11 Feb 2012 Posts: 744
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 4:49 am Post subject: |
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No experience with this myself, but since you have your visa, I don't think it should be a problem. Your visa is still valid even if it's on your old passport. If I were you, I would just bring both passports with me, and show them the still current visa on the old passport. If worse came to worse, I would think you could just get a visa-on-arrival when you got back from Singapore.
Sounds like a bit of a headache though. |
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rrruss
Joined: 24 Jul 2006 Posts: 10
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:02 am Post subject: |
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Thanks Luke
The British Embassy told me today that I cannot leave Vietnam on the old passport and that I must transfer the visa to the new passport. The old passport is now invalid. |
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Kram

Joined: 20 Sep 2005 Posts: 152 Location: In a chair
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:51 am Post subject: |
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@ OP. I doubt the British Embassy can dictate Vietnam's policy on work permits. I'd contact the appropriate Vietnam govt. department and find out what they say and I also realise this is easier said than done.
In the country I'm in it's acceptable to leave with a cancelled passport and current visa + replacement passport, but you can't use the cancelled passport to re-enter, therefore a new visa would be needed in the replacement passport.
I apologise for not being more helpful in regard to Vietnam. |
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LettersAthruZ
Joined: 25 Apr 2010 Posts: 466 Location: North Viet Nam
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 5:59 am Post subject: |
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| rrruss wrote: |
Thanks Luke
The British Embassy told me today that I cannot leave Vietnam on the old passport and that I must transfer the visa to the new passport. The old passport is now invalid. |
I really don't grasp THAT!
Last I remember, you needed to show your INCOMING Viet Nam Immigration stamp along with your visa so that, on the way OUT of Viet Nam, the Immigration Inspector is satisfied that you have NOT over-stayed your visa!
HOW THE HELL are they planning to "transfer" the visa to your new passport? Are they gonna use glue remover and gently prise it off of the old passport and gently affix it to the pristine pages of your new passport???
EQUALLY AS RIDICULOUS is the idea (which is what I am assuming the U.K. Embassy folk are thinking) that you take both passports into Viet Nam Immigration and you get a new sticker on the SAME VISA with the remainder of unused time put onto the new sticker inside your new passport.
If The British Embassy really thinks that Viet Nam Immigration is going to do this without a hefty bribe.....then they really need somebody with an I.Q. above 75 at The Foreign Ministry! |
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Jbhughes

Joined: 01 Jul 2010 Posts: 254
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 7:21 am Post subject: |
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I had a slightly similar issue when I went back to the UK earlier this year.
Thanks to the thoughtful officials on either sides of the Moc Bai Bavet border and the size of the the damn visas, my passport is nearly full. I'd intended to get a nice new jumbo passport in the UK until I realised that of course my temporary residency card and work permit have the current passport number on them.
So I contacted the Vietnam Customs and Immigrations freephone who told me in perfect English the correct procedure (I still don't understand why my keyboard doesn't have a sarcasm key). No, the only means of procuring any information I could find was contacting a well-known expat company, they told me that they had had customers who had got through customs (coming in to VN) with their new passport, using their the visa in their old one. They said it was a matter of luck though, sometimes it was ok, sometimes not. I decided against renewing my passport, as I didn't want any bother.
DO bear in mind though, that this was for coming INTO the country and my t.r.c and w.p. still had months left on them, months I didn't want to lose. Given that you would be leaving the country and that you don't have much left on your visa anyway, I would try it. I don't think you have as much to lose and there are surely less potential problems leaving the country in this situation than entering it.
Should you decide not to go on holiday, then I wouldn't worry about it at all quite frankly. If you school can arrange a Visa and will pay for it (and have a track record of doing this for you or others in the past), then just wait for then to sort it all out for you at the end of April. By the time you actually get to using your Visa again, the authorities will have the shiny new Visa in the shiny new passport and will stamp with glee. I have been through customs (Moc Bai-Bavet) with a whole years worth of time unaccounted for in my passport (an old temporary residency card) and they didn't ask any questions (or ask for any money).
Good luck either way. |
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snollygoster
Joined: 04 Jun 2009 Posts: 478
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 9:20 am Post subject: New Passport-New Visa |
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I HAVE had a similar experience. The general rule of thumb is "Whatever costs the foreigner most and is most inconvenient is what is required".
I guess all cases will be the same- more or less. I had to get a new visa, and pay for it, despite the original visa still being valid- reason? My old passport was cancelled when the new one was issued, so according to a MR TUYEN at the Immigration Office in Hanoi, either a new visa, OR a considerable "surprise package" in the folded up newspaper he shoved at me, would suffice. I refused to give his newspaper any second look, so was issued with a 5 day visa to either get a new visa or leave Vietnam.
Phone call to a friend in HCMC and trip there got the visa, but a visit from Mr TUYEN and armed friends to my home revealed that according to Mr. Tuyen, the visa issued in HCMC was a fake. A call to my Embassy and a few words to Mr Tuyen saw him leave with some swearing and vowing to rid Vietnam of foreigners. Nice attitude, and most probably wont have to deal with the infamous Mr Tuyen. |
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Jbhughes

Joined: 01 Jul 2010 Posts: 254
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 9:42 am Post subject: |
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Snolly, did you go directly to the Immigration Office to ask them or did they somehow contact you through other means? The first option withstanding, do you think they would have somehow 'got to you' had you not have contacted anyone?
While I'm certainly not advocating being visa-less or passport-less (I'm sure those 3 weeks were nervous indeed, OP), I don't see the officials at the airport making a fuss and I could see the issue just sliding by until April when the OP gets their new visa. Or do you think they would make a problem at that point? Your thoughts? |
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Kram

Joined: 20 Sep 2005 Posts: 152 Location: In a chair
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Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2012 11:38 am Post subject: |
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| Jbhughes wrote: |
So I contacted the Vietnam Customs and Immigrations freephone who told me in perfect English the correct procedure (I still don't understand why my keyboard doesn't have a sarcasm key). |
If only someone in Vietnam could speak both English and Vietnamese (sarcasm noted).
Have a nice day.
Ps. Op, don�t forget about the non-existent entry stamp in the new passport. |
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