artme
20th August 2009, 10:25 AM
If you do then donīt come to Brasil!! the hours the wife and I have spent since we arrived here in chasing paper has been astonishing. The main culprits are those to do with government departments.
For instance, I was granted permanent residency by the Brasilian Embassy in Australia. That was just the beginning. On arriving here I had to report to the Federal police to have everything recognised and notarised so that I could get my ID card,
Went to local Policia Fedrale and was refused entry becuase I was wearing Bermudas:o.
Home, change, back. Policia Federale didnīspeak to me, but to the wife! I may as well not have been there!
Then the fun began. 4 more trips to and from the station with different pieces of paperwork. Finally all was done and as we left the station the fellow raced after us and called us back _ heīd forgotten to sign my passport!!
That is nothing compared to the farce surrounding the purchase of a second hand car.
It has taken a week of paper chasing at alevel anyone would find hard to credit.Over here fines are registered against the car and not the owner, so imagine the mess this can create once the car changes hands. In our case it was only one fine. Then there is the resolution of promisory notes, bank or other finance payments, the trasnfer of registration and the proof that both parties are who they say they are.
All of this requires trips to several different agencies and banks. The time taken is incredible.
I will NEVER complain about Australian Paperwork again!:no::no::no:
For instance, I was granted permanent residency by the Brasilian Embassy in Australia. That was just the beginning. On arriving here I had to report to the Federal police to have everything recognised and notarised so that I could get my ID card,
Went to local Policia Fedrale and was refused entry becuase I was wearing Bermudas:o.
Home, change, back. Policia Federale didnīspeak to me, but to the wife! I may as well not have been there!
Then the fun began. 4 more trips to and from the station with different pieces of paperwork. Finally all was done and as we left the station the fellow raced after us and called us back _ heīd forgotten to sign my passport!!
That is nothing compared to the farce surrounding the purchase of a second hand car.
It has taken a week of paper chasing at alevel anyone would find hard to credit.Over here fines are registered against the car and not the owner, so imagine the mess this can create once the car changes hands. In our case it was only one fine. Then there is the resolution of promisory notes, bank or other finance payments, the trasnfer of registration and the proof that both parties are who they say they are.
All of this requires trips to several different agencies and banks. The time taken is incredible.
I will NEVER complain about Australian Paperwork again!:no::no::no: