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CLMN | When the issue is security

29/04/2014

Last week I went to one of the foreign embassies in The Hague for a visa application. I have had experiences of applying for visa in several countries, for different destinations. Rules and procedures in each embassies and consular offices were similar and different at the same time.

My experience of visa application in India would normally go like this: First, a receptionist will check the copy of the appointment to let me in. Then she will ask me whether I am carrying my passport, fully filled visa application form, photos and exact fees in cash. As I would say ‘yes’ - she will give me a waiting number and let me go on to a security personal. The securities will then check my bag, scan my body and ask me to switch off my mobile phone. When all these processes are done, and I am proved to be innocent enough to make the visa application - I would be allowed to enter the hall and wait for my turn to see the visa officer.

I never questioned this method and believed this to be the most secured and efficient procedure. In The Hague, as google maps showed me the exact location, I looked up to see nothing but yet another Dutch house with some flags hanging from the roof. I stepped down a few stairs, pushed the door open and found myself in a small chamber. There was nobody around, except a man sitting behind a counter. Realising that I am already in front of the visa officer without going through any of the procedures, I handed in all the documents. Even more surprisingly, he expressed no annoyance as I told him I am short of cash. He gave me the direction to the nearest cash machine; and I was allowed to go out, run to a cash machine in the next street, come back and finish my application.

Now I wonder why it takes so much security and complicated procedures to accept visa application in other embassies in other parts of the world. Is it just crowd management technique or precaution against crime? Maybe both. However, the embassy in The Hague somehow gave me an impression on how security and efficiency can be built upon freedom, trust and respect. I have taken some time to think about it. Did other authorities do the same?

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