Английская Википедия:Camouflage passport

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Файл:New Granada camouflage passport cover with Dominica motto and barry wavy shield.jpg
A New Granada camouflage passport. The design on this cover includes the name of a country that no longer exists (New Granada) and a coat of arms assembled from the real arms and motto of Dominica (motto: "Après Bondie, C'est La Ter") and a shield of barry wavy design different from that of the Dominican arms.
Файл:Dominica-arms.PNG
The arms of Dominica, for comparison

A camouflage passport is a document, designed to look like a real passport, issued in the name of a non-existent country or entity. It may be sold with matching documents, such as an international driver's license, club membership card, insurance documents or similar supporting identity papers.[1] A camouflage passport is not a real, valid passport and is to be distinguished from a valid second passport, which an individual with dual citizenship may be eligible to hold, a novelty fantasy passport, or a fake of a real passport.

Origins

False identity documents have a long history, but in 1998, the idea of the camouflage passport was credited by the Financial Times to Donna Walker of Houston, who said she had got the idea ten years earlier when an American on a hijacked aircraft was shot because of his nationality.

Walker said that she started by asking the Sri Lankan embassy whether they still had rights over the name Ceylon and, finding they did not, went on to ask the U.S. State Department whether producing a passport in that name would be legal, and they "couldn't show (her) it wasn't". Walker went on to produce hundreds of passports in different country names, trading as International Documents Service, and described her "finest hour" as being during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait when a group of European oil executives were able to use her documents to pass through Iraqi checkpoints and escape to Jordan.

She said the basic idea was to look like "a not very interesting man from a not very interesting country".[2]

Form

Camouflage passports are generally produced in the name of countries that no longer exist or have changed their name.[3]

Often these are former colonies that changed their name on independence, or use the names of places or political subdivisions that exist within a real country but have never issued or cannot issue passports (for instance, the British Hebrides which are islands off the west coast of Scotland that have never been separately independent).

Usually, the names chosen have a plausible or familiar ring to them. Names that have been used include:

Purpose and legality

In 2011, the European Union resolved that a "non-exhaustive list of known fantasy and camouflage passports" should be drawn up that "should not be subject to recognition or non-recognition. They should not entitle their holders to cross the external borders and should not be endorsed with a visa".[5] A list was subsequently published and last updated in February 2023.[3]

Sellers

The producers of camouflage passports are generally internet based businesses that specialise in producing various types of identify documents that may be in real or false names. Other services often offered include offshore company formation, introductions to offshore banking and financial services providers and similar services all targeted at international mobile individuals and those interested in avoiding tax and government regulation. Despite several companies withdrawing from this market in recent years, others continue to operate, offering passports that purport to include UV tags and holograms for verisimilitude.

Fantasy passports

Файл:Passports.jpg
A Nevada fantasy passport
Файл:Expopass.jpg
Expo 67 passport

Fantasy passports are passport-like documents issued as a novelty or souvenir, to make a political statement or to show loyalty to a political or other cause, such as independence movements, as well as sovereign citizen, freemen on the land and redemptions movements.[6] Souvenir United States state passports have also been issued, for Nevada or the Republic of Texas for instance, but these typically are clearly marked as novelties. Examples include:

  • Intergovernmental Institution for the use of Micro-algae Spirulina Against Malnutrition (IIMSAM) issued dubious UN-like Laissez Passer[7] that were also blacklisted by the European Union[8]

References

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External links

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  1. "A precaution in your pocket" by Amon Cohen in The Financial Times, 25 August 1997, p. 10. Retrieved 16 February 2014 from ProQuest.
  2. "How to travel under cover" by John Westbrooke in The Financial Times, 24 January 1998, p. 2. Retrieved 14 January 2014 from Gale News Vault.
  3. 3,0 3,1 Шаблон:Cite web
  4. "The Camouflaged Passport Advantage: How Getting a Fake Passport Just Might Save Your Life" by Barney Brantingham in The Santa Barbara Independent, 27 March 2007. Retrieved 14 January 2014. Archived here.
  5. "DECISION No 1105/2011/EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 25 October 2011 on the list of travel documents which entitle the holder to cross the external borders and which may be endorsed with a visa and on setting up a mechanism for establishing this list" in Official Journal of the European Union, 4.11.2011, L 287/9, para 10. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  6. Шаблон:Cite web
  7. Шаблон:Citation
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  10. Conch Republic Passports conchrepublic.com, 2014. Retrieved 16 February 2014. Шаблон:Webarchive
  11. Шаблон:Citation
  12. Times.nskstate.co
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  18. International Civil Aviation Organization Regional Seminar on MRTDs, Biometrics and Border Security, 27-29 November 2012, p30
  19. International Civil Aviation TECHNICAL ADVISORY GROUP ON MACHINE READABLE TRAVEL DOCUMENTS, TAG-MRTD/16, WP/5, 13/9/05, section 2.1.1
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