|
|
|
The following countries in the past have allowed D.O.M. citizens to enter without first obtaining a visa: Seychelles, Sudan, Benin, Sir Lanka, Liechtenstein, Grenada, St. Vincent, Antigua, Dominica, St. Lucia, Trinidad, Mexico, Argentina, Paraguay, Peru, Chile, Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, (U.S.A. by USA born Melchizedekians only), Canada, Fiji etc.. There is no guaranty that this same privilege will be extended in the future. Some travelled with DOM diplomatic passport. Singapore wrote a letter stating that since April of 1998, Singapore no longer recognizes DOM, although since that date, at least one DOM Ambassador entered Singapore with his DOM diplomatic passport. With a diplomatic visa: Central African Republic, Nigeria, Philippines, etc. Panama, South Korea, Brunei, Burma, Thailand, and Ethiopia have written letters stating that even though they do not recognize DOM, the people of the Dominion of Melchizedek may apply for visa permits using their DOM passports. A Melchizedekian applied for a visa to South Africa from a Central American state and was told that bearers of Melchizedekian passports are visa free. Additional forms of defacto recognition from the U.S.A. include: U.S.A.'s I.N.S. and D.O.J. letter to Dominion of Melchizedek "Ambassador" making "official" request regarding Altanta Olympics. U.S.A. I.R.S. issuance of tax id numbers for D.O.M. corporations. U.S.A. passport issuance authority accepted D.O.M. Court Order for Name Change of dual citizen. U.S.A. States such as California and Nevada have recognized corporation laws of D.O.M. U.S.A. Federal Court has recognized D.O.M. See: http://westgroup.com/products/newsletter/bkcy/bkcy1202.htm Consular plates issued to 4 D.O.M. diplomat in three U.S.A. states. The U.S.A.'s O.C.C. and F.D.I.C. have officially ( http://www.occ.treas.gov/ftp/Alert/98-38.txt ) referred to D.O.M. as a "sovereignty" not officially recognized by the U.S.A. The EU wrote a letter on behalf of the President of the E.U. to the D.O.M. Minister of European Affairs wherein the letter referred to DOM as an "ecclesiastical state". The first form of defacto recognition was extended to DOM in 1990 when the U.N. legal department wrote a letter to a D.O.M. official referring to D.O.M. as "an entity aspiring to statehood." Two Asian and nine Pacific island nations endorsed D.O.M. for observer status in the A.P.P.U. According to certain news reports, the Bank of England referred to the Dominion of Melchizedek as a "group of islands" and stated that D.O.M. "does exist."
|