What’s the most difficulty you’ve had with getting a visa?

Scarlett

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Based on the @nancypants question about the Turkmenistan visa and rather convoluted process related to it, what have other people found is the most difficult or most problematic visa you’ve had to acquire?

So far for me Turkmenistan has really been the only one with any sort of hoops to jump through. I suspect @Flashback or @PineappleSkip may have had some interesting experiences based on the more exotic places they’ve been.
 
Well. Most interesting was probably Mongolian (which I obtained while in Japan), or possibly Belarusian transit visa that I had to get in Beijing

Hardest, no doubt this will be a controversial statement but…my Australian one!!
 
India has always been a trying exercise - that is, convoluted and complex. Russia has been the same, although I haven’t done one for a few years now. I remember one of the questions was to state your previous two employers, a contact person with the phone number and address. Also, countries visited in the last 10 years with dates. Fortunately it only allows 10 answers there.

But the most difficult without question for me was getting a renewal of a USA B1/B2 Visa (I’m ineligible for an ESTA having visited Iran in the past).

Entirely web based, the website is clunky, frequently faults and sends you back to the start or, worse, simply stops and doesn’t let you proceed for no obvious reason. Any help is via submission to a bunch of no-help people I think located in Guatemala who might get back to you via a notice in the log-in section but that reply didn’t necessarily make any sense.

Whole process took me I think three months.
 
I dn’t recall any visas being particularly hard to get, but getting a Pakistan visa in Kabul was probably the most entertaining experience. The embassy was only open for visa applications one hour a day and after the endless security checks to get in there, you entered a dusty room straight out of an Indiana Jones movie. There was a small window and about 50 traditionally dressed Afghans there who had no concept of queue and attacked the window, and often each other, like seagulls fighting over a chip. Inside, a Pakistani official, endlessly disgusted with the crowd, would shout arbitrary instructions at the throng about who was next. Luckily Hamid, our fixer, was able to sidle up to the window and point out the sahib hanging back from the fray. He got me to the window past a lot of Afghan objections, and I got the last visa interview of the day before the window slammed shut.

More problematic was getting into Azerbaijan during covid. If you didn’t travel internationally during Covid you happily missed out on a whole world of beaurocratic pain. Azerbaijan had a list of countries who could visit, Australia wasn’t on the list, and it was all duly recorded in the IATA Timatic database. I was doing work for the Ministry of Economy, who evidently had communications issues with the State Migration Service who had to issue the invitation to visit that would bypass the entry ban. With about a week to go I finally was emailed a bad photocopy of an obliquely worded invitation that said something along the lines of “no objection is extended to Pineapple entering Azerbaijan”. The actual visa could only be issued electronically on arrival. Catch 22: can’t travel without a visa, but can only get a visa on arrival.

Checking in to CX in Sydney with a fine collection of paperwork, computer says no, but luckily it was a weekday and Cathay rang the Azerbaijani embassy, got the same ambiguous advice as the photocopy, but added this was the usual process, which was enough to get me on the first sector. Just - they were very edgy as it was an LH ticket. Computer said no again in HKG, followed by a similar rigmarole. Finally, boarding LH in FRA, computer said nein, but gate agent was familiar with the AZ process and tried to override. Computer said ‘which part of nein don’t you understand’, and multiple phone calls to LH bureaucracy finally got the override done about time to offload bags. Finally got the visa from a machine at Baku airport.
 
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Hmm. At some stage I will visit Iraq, Cuba, Iran, Venezuela and hell, probably even North Korea if I manage it. Not looking forward to the US visa experiences before and after those visits.
 
I had enormous difficulty getting a visa for China in 2010 with Urumqi and Tibet listed as places I'd be visiting. After an unforgettable call from the consulate, ("Why you go to Urum-chee", "Cannot go to Urum-chee", "Are you journalist?", etc) followed by an amended application that bore little resemblance to our travels, our visas were issued and we went to Urumqi anyway.

That was in Australia, but its always "fun" getting a visa whilst in a third location. In 1998, I got a working holiday visa for a two week trip to the UK whilst living in Japan. I wasn't going to get back to the UK to start the working holiday proper until after my 28th birthday and thus needed to have it activated prior. This ruse was picked up on by the British Consulate in Tokyo and I was hauled in for an interview. They said they were issuing the visa but also read the riot act regarding the timing of my travels (made it seem like I was exploiting a visa 'loophole'), together with the type of employment I could seek (ie not working in my profession), there for a holiday too, etc. I still remember the magnificent timber furniture and wall panelling in the Consulate.
 
India has always been a trying exercise - that is, convoluted and complex. Russia has been the same, although I haven’t done one for a few years now. I remember one of the questions was to state your previous two employers, a contact person with the phone number and address. Also, countries visited in the last 10 years with dates. Fortunately it only allows 10 answers there.

But the most difficult without question for me was getting a renewal of a USA B1/B2 Visa (I’m ineligible for an ESTA having visited Iran in the past).

Entirely web based, the website is clunky, frequently faults and sends you back to the start or, worse, simply stops and doesn’t let you proceed for no obvious reason. Any help is via submission to a bunch of no-help people I think located in Guatemala who might get back to you via a notice in the log-in section but that reply didn’t necessarily make any sense.

Whole process took me I think three months.
How could you forget Chile?….
 
Hmm. At some stage I will visit Iraq, Cuba, Iran, Venezuela and hell, probably even North Korea if I manage it. Not looking forward to the US visa experiences before and after those visits.
I "forgot" I had been to some of those places as well as Libya, Russia, Xinjiang, and Tibet when filling out a very intrusive security clearance application for a federal government project a few years ago. I don't recall being asked about them when entering the US in 2023 but it's a new world now and I share your concerns for future visits.
 

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