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To obtain a Tazkira, an application must be filed with the NSIA. [13] The processing fee is up to 700 afghanis, which is the equivalent of around $10 US dollars. [5] The Tazkira certificate and e-Tazkira are both issued by the NSIA. [14] Factual evidence regarding the applicant being a national and citizen of Afghanistan is required. [4]
Compulsory for citizens 16 and older, and compulsory for all non-citizen permanent residents. The older form of Identity Document, in the form of a green booklet, began being phased out in 2013. [91] Although passports and driver's licences are also acceptable forms of identification, banks only accept a national identity card.
Afghan passports are international travel documents issued by the General Directorate of Passports to nationals and citizens of Afghanistan. [1] Every person with a valid electronic Afghan identity card (e-Tazkira) can apply for and receive an Afghan passport, [5] [6] which is renewable every 5–10 years.
NSIA may refer to: National Statistics and Information Authority (Afghanistan) Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority; Norwegian Safety Investigation Authority
Now the national postal service wants to phase this out by putting mailboxes on every street across the country, part of a plan to modernize a service long challenged by bureaucracy and war.
Long title: An Act to make provision for a national scheme of registration of individuals and for the issue of cards capable of being used for identifying registered individuals; to make it an offence for a person to be in possession or control of an identity document to which he is not entitled, or of apparatus, articles or materials for making false identity documents; to amend the Consular ...
Bread and Roses follows the experiences of three women in the months following the fall of Afghanistan's capital city, Kabul: Zahra, a dentist whom the Taliban attempt to force to close her ...
During the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (1996–2001), Abdul Samad Khaksar (also referred to as Mohammad Khaksar in some news reports) was a Taliban deputy Minister of the Interior, who is notable because he offered to help the US deal with al-Qaeda and became an informant for the Northern Alliance. Khaksar was assassinated on January 14 ...