. '''To Assurance Policy''' '''[[http://www.cacert.org/policy/AssurancePolicy|Assurance Policy]]''' - '''To Assurance Handbook''' '''[[AssuranceHandbook2|The Assurance Handbook]]''' -<
> '''To Acceptable documents''' '''[[AcceptableDocuments|Acceptable documents]]''' ---- Please note that Venezuela allows multiple citizenships, therefore you might be presented with a Venezuelan passport and a passport from another country, probably Italy, Spain or Portugal. = Venezuelan passport = * New biometric passports can be '''accepted''' as '''primary'''. * Red cover passports bearing or not the Andean Community inscription can be '''accepted''' as '''primary'''. * Old blue cover passports are still valid for travel except in the USA, but they don't have any special security measure, therefore they should '''not be accepted''' as '''primary''', but they can be accepted as secondary provided they're in a good state and they haven't been cancelled. It should be useful to check if there aren't cancelled visas in the passport, which can mean that the passport is considered untrustworthy by a third country. * Hand-written and special passports (so called ''service'' passports) should '''not be accepted''' as primary documents. Hand-written passports should '''not be accepted''' by any means. = Cédula de identidad = Note that Venezuelan passports, even older ones, cite the ''cedula'' number. This is very useful to check the document validity. Look under ''Cedula de identidad''. * All non-expired ''cedulas'' can be '''accepted''' as a '''secondary''' document provided you've checked either the Coat of Arms ''bas relief'' (older documents) or the security threads on the paper (current documents) * ''Cedulas'' should not be accepted as primary documents, since they're quite easy to get with a photostatic copy of an older document. = Other documents = The following documents should '''not''' be accepted as primary documents, and it's up to the assurer to even consider them at all. They might, however, increase assurers confidence. * Government service cards (featuring signature, photo and ''cedula'' number) and military/police ID cards with photo. * International documents such as a secondary passport or a secondary ID card. * New driver's license feature a photo, older driver's licenses don't have one but feature the ''cedula'' number. * Student ID (either local or ISIC) There's no electoral card in Venezuela, and political party affiliations usually lack photographs and generally aren't issued by trustworthy organizations. There's no Social Security Card or any other massively used national document. ''Comment: Government ID cards (sometimes also called service cards) usually are considered valid for a CAcert Assurance if they contain a photo. Of course you should not accept one if you are not familliar with it! BernhardFröhlich'' ---- . CategoryAssurance