WoosterLad
Registered Users (C)
I went to Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Brasil on vacation in September 2006. Here was my experience obtaining visas for the four countries at their respective consulates in Los Angeles (I needed visas for all four countries by the way):
Chile - the consulate had NO clue what a refugee travel document was, but they were the easiest people to deal with once they figured out what that strange green document was. I got my single-entry visa on the spot!
Argentina - really friendly person who manned the visa desk (Pablo I think.) They had to send the application and copy of the travel document to the Immigration Department in Buenos Aires for approval. It took around two weeks. Once approval came through, they called me in and stamped the visa the same morning.
Uruguay - small country with a really slow visa process. RTDs need to be approved by the Interior Ministry back in Montevideo and they take between 4 to 6 weeks to do so. Veronica, who heads visas at their consulate in LA, is one of the friendliest and most helpful visa people I have ever dealt with. Once they approve it, you can go in to get the visa stamp right away.
Brazil - the most efficient and professional visa department of the lot. They are clearly aware of what a RTD is and ask no questions. I got my visa in under a week, at the scheduled time of pick up.
Now, entering those countries with a RTD was altogether another matter. The Chilean IO kept me held up for 15 minutes while he verified the RTD. The Argentine IO had NO CLUE what it was and apparently, even the visa didn't look official. I was held up for 30 minutes. Entering Uruguay was easy even though, especially through the immigration check point at the BA Ferry Terminal. Entering and leaving Brazil was a breeze.
Chile - the consulate had NO clue what a refugee travel document was, but they were the easiest people to deal with once they figured out what that strange green document was. I got my single-entry visa on the spot!
Argentina - really friendly person who manned the visa desk (Pablo I think.) They had to send the application and copy of the travel document to the Immigration Department in Buenos Aires for approval. It took around two weeks. Once approval came through, they called me in and stamped the visa the same morning.
Uruguay - small country with a really slow visa process. RTDs need to be approved by the Interior Ministry back in Montevideo and they take between 4 to 6 weeks to do so. Veronica, who heads visas at their consulate in LA, is one of the friendliest and most helpful visa people I have ever dealt with. Once they approve it, you can go in to get the visa stamp right away.
Brazil - the most efficient and professional visa department of the lot. They are clearly aware of what a RTD is and ask no questions. I got my visa in under a week, at the scheduled time of pick up.
Now, entering those countries with a RTD was altogether another matter. The Chilean IO kept me held up for 15 minutes while he verified the RTD. The Argentine IO had NO CLUE what it was and apparently, even the visa didn't look official. I was held up for 30 minutes. Entering Uruguay was easy even though, especially through the immigration check point at the BA Ferry Terminal. Entering and leaving Brazil was a breeze.
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