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Most visitors to Bahrain may obtain a visa on arrival or an e-Visa before traveling. [1] Citizens of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries have freedom of movement in Bahrain and may enter with a national ID card. [2] Passport must be valid for 6 months from arrival and visitors must hold return or onward ticket. [3]
Appointment wait times for a given embassy/consulate and visa class can be different between the interview case and the interview waiver (i.e., document drop-off / dropbox) case, with the wait times for the interview waiver case generally being shorter than for the interview case.
A Bahraini passport. Visa requirements for Bahraini citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Bahrain.As of 2024, Bahraini citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 91 countries and territories, ranking the Bahraini passport 59th in the world according to the Visa Restrictions Index.
The embassy diplomatically represents Pakistani interests in Bahrain, and provides services to Pakistani expatriates in the country, numbering over 80,000. [2] Key consular services provided include visa provisions, passport services, document attestation, national identity card and citizenship documentation, and other paperwork. [3]
The Embassy of Bahrain in Washington, D.C. is the diplomatic mission of the Kingdom of Bahrain to the United States. It is located at 3502 International Drive, Northwest, Washington, D.C., in the North Cleveland Park neighborhood. [1] The ambassador as of 2021 is Shaikh Abdullah Bin Rashid Al Khalifa.
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Bahrain, excluding honorary consulates. Bahrain's diplomatic network is rather limited, with the majority of overseas missions located in predominantly Muslim or Asian countries.
As of 2019, Bahrain had an estimated population of 1.64 million, up from the official 2010 census population of 1.23 million, of which 666,172 (53.5%) in 2010 were non-Bahraini, mainly foreign workers. There were 568,399 Bahraini citizens, 99.8% of which were Muslim. There are about 1,000 Christian citizens [6] and about 40 Jewish citizens. [7]
The Labour Market Regulatory Authority (LMRA) is a government body in Bahrain with a corporate identity endowed with full financial and administrative independence under the authority of a board of directors chaired by the Minister of Labour. The Authority was established on 31 May 2006 to regulate and control work permits for foreign workers ...