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Citizenship in Romania can be acquired by four methods: birth, adoption, repatriation, and request. Birth: All children born to Romanian citizens acquire citizenship at birth. The child may be born on Romanian territory or abroad and only one parent must be a Romanian citizen.
As of 2024 Henley Passport Index, Romanian citizens can visit 177 countries without a visa or with a visa granted on arrival. Romanian citizens can live and work in any country within the EU as a result of the right of free movement and residence granted in Article 21 of the EU Treaty. [2] Every Romanian citizen is also a citizen of the ...
The Directorate General of National Security of Morocco announced it will issue a newer version of the national electronic identity card (NEIC) from 2020. The NEIC is biometric and provides citizens of a birth certificate, residence certificate, extract of birth and citizenship certificates. Mozambique: Bilhete de identidade (Identity card) N/A
CNP (Romanian: Cod Numeric Personal; English: Personal Numerical Code) the same for every ID card of the individual (see below) Surname(s) Given name(s) Sex; Names of the parents (replaced with the nationality since 2009) Date of birth (not explicitly written on ID-2, but included in CNP) Address; Issuing authority (mostly "SPCLEP <City>")
The Convention on the issue of multilingual and coded certificates and extracts from civil status records, signed in Strasbourg on 14 March 2014, is an update to the convention of 1976, to extend its provisions to documents acknowledging parentage, registered partnership and same-sex marriage, electronic transmission of documents, specify the ...
Visa-free from November 30, 2024 to December 31, 2025. [86] Visa not required for holders of normal Romanian passports endorsed "for public affairs". X Colombia: Visa not required [87] 180 days 90 days – extendable up to 180-days stay within a one-year period Comoros: Visa on arrival [88] 45 days X Republic of the Congo: Visa required [89]
A Russian birth certificate may either be filled out in type or print. It is then signed and sealed by a qualified officer of the public authority issuing the certificate (a local civil registry or Russian overseas mission). By default, information on the parents' ethnic origins is no longer recorded – however, it may be recorded upon request.
Currently, multiple given names have to be separated by a hyphen symbol ("-") on birth certificates and other civil status documents. For short period of time the law permitted multiple given names being registered without hyphen separation (between Government Ordinance 80/2011 [21] and Law 61/2012 [22]) but the Law 61/2012 reverted to the original convention where hyphens are used to separate ...