How long before visas become hard to get?
- Grand Barong
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Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
Is that a serious comment?? Someone who is destitute & begging is most likely to be suffering from some kind of addiction that has derailed their life for one reason or another, Not representative of the majority of visa holders.Kenr wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:19 pmLast night I was sitting at an outside table at 130 Gastropub when a guy came up to me and asked for $.50. I was about to give him some money but decided against it. He walked over to the other two (2) outside tables that had people and was begging from them. Couldn’t tell by his accent where he was from but he was looking a little rough.truffledog wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:09 pmMost countries rely on tourist dolla and still they make it kind of harder to stay there longterm. We contribute to the development of the countries, dont depend on their local welfare and dont steal anybody's job. We should be more welcome?Doc67 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 1:42 pmI have alluded to this several times, it is one of the reasons this country is a no good for me long term. They can slowly drive you out, year by year, with more fees and restrictions. Or not so slowly with a huge FRO notice in the Phnom Penh Post.
But I am a moaner so nobody listens...
Is this the type of person that contributes to the development of their country? Is this the type of person that’s not looking for welfare? Should this individual even be in a foreign country?
In my opinion this is the type of thing that causes countries to strictly enforce or even modify their long-stay visa requirements.
You think guys begging for 50cents, changes Government immigration policies?
You were going to "give him some money but decided against it" What swayed your opinion?
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Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
I've been approached by a barang asking for 2,000 Riel a couple of times quite recently. My guess would be that people like that are unlikely to have current visas, so tightening requirements would have no effect on them unless they stopped issuing barangs tourist visas altogether. They just don't renew.Kenr wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:19 pm Last night I was sitting at an outside table at 130 Gastropub when a guy came up to me and asked for $.50. I was about to give him some money but decided against it. He walked over to the other two (2) outside tables that had people and was begging from them. Couldn’t tell by his accent where he was from but he was looking a little rough.
Is this the type of person that contributes to the development of their country? Is this the type of person that’s not looking for welfare? Should this individual even be in a foreign country?
In my opinion this is the type of thing that causes countries to strictly enforce or even modify their long-stay visa requirements.
By all means let them enforce the rules as they stand, but how likely is it that this guy will be picked up by the police in the event that he doesn't cause any kind of disturbance ?
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
For many people the problem is there is no legal visa available. Think people working remotely, digital nomads, not necessarily the poorest and a group some countries do welcome. Cambodia hasn't discovered them yet.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:55 pmI was thinking along the same lines, is the OP talking about people who currently obtain their visas because they legitimately qualify for them or for those who don't?John Bingham wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:50 pm How long before visas become hard to get ( for dodgy people with no valid paperwork)?
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
Do you think an individual like this, who had the possibility of becoming destitute, should have been allowed into the country? Would you be ok with this happening in your home county?Grand Barong wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:57 pmIs that a serious comment?? Someone who is destitute & begging is most likely to be suffering from some kind of addiction that has derailed their life for one reason or another, Not representative of the majority of visa holders.Kenr wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:19 pmLast night I was sitting at an outside table at 130 Gastropub when a guy came up to me and asked for $.50. I was about to give him some money but decided against it. He walked over to the other two (2) outside tables that had people and was begging from them. Couldn’t tell by his accent where he was from but he was looking a little rough.truffledog wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:09 pmMost countries rely on tourist dolla and still they make it kind of harder to stay there longterm. We contribute to the development of the countries, dont depend on their local welfare and dont steal anybody's job. We should be more welcome?Doc67 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 1:42 pmI have alluded to this several times, it is one of the reasons this country is a no good for me long term. They can slowly drive you out, year by year, with more fees and restrictions. Or not so slowly with a huge FRO notice in the Phnom Penh Post.
But I am a moaner so nobody listens...
Is this the type of person that contributes to the development of their country? Is this the type of person that’s not looking for welfare? Should this individual even be in a foreign country?
In my opinion this is the type of thing that causes countries to strictly enforce or even modify their long-stay visa requirements.
You think guys begging for 50cents, changes Government immigration policies?
You were going to "give him some money but decided against it" What swayed your opinion?
Do I think it changes government immigration policies? It could. That’s what this thread is about, right? I don’t believe immigration policies are changed/tightened through ASEAN, but could become stricter here by assuring individuals have pensions and/or adequate funds, such as they do in other SE Asian countries, if individuals like this gentleman become a common thing.
What changed my mind? There are a shit load of kids trying to sell me things every night, flowers, gum, fruit, and I don’t buy from them, so why give money away for nothing? To continue to enable this person? No.
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
I agree, that’s pretty much what I’ve been saying in this thread, Cambodia is just enforcing the rules as written, but it seems that those rules are affecting a person or two on here.Stravaiger wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 6:00 pmI've been approached by a barang asking for 2,000 Riel a couple of times quite recently. My guess would be that people like that are unlikely to have current visas, so tightening requirements would have no effect on them unless they stopped issuing barangs tourist visas altogether. They just don't renew.Kenr wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:19 pm Last night I was sitting at an outside table at 130 Gastropub when a guy came up to me and asked for $.50. I was about to give him some money but decided against it. He walked over to the other two (2) outside tables that had people and was begging from them. Couldn’t tell by his accent where he was from but he was looking a little rough.
Is this the type of person that contributes to the development of their country? Is this the type of person that’s not looking for welfare? Should this individual even be in a foreign country?
In my opinion this is the type of thing that causes countries to strictly enforce or even modify their long-stay visa requirements.
By all means let them enforce the rules as they stand, but how likely is it that this guy will be picked up by the police in the event that he doesn't cause any kind of disturbance ?
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
No, I was thinking about local government policy and its alignment with ASEAN only ...Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:55 pmI was thinking along the same lines, is the OP talking about people who currently obtain their visas because they legitimately qualify for them or for those who don't?John Bingham wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:50 pm How long before visas become hard to get ( for dodgy people with no valid paperwork)?
(By the way, thanks for that deep sociological insight, John... St. Patrick would be proud to know none of the deportees will be going back to Ireland, since he chased out all the snakes ages ago...
https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/hist ... es-ireland
~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~
“There are terrible difficulties in the notion of probability, but we may ignore them at present.” - Bertrand Russell
“There are terrible difficulties in the notion of probability, but we may ignore them at present.” - Bertrand Russell
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
If there is no legal visa available for you then you shouldn't be here. Not really that complicated is it? Go be a digital nomad somewhere else, especially as I bet they don't pay any VAT or withholding tax or tax on your earnings to the Cambodian governmentKammekor wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 6:04 pmFor many people the problem is there is no legal visa available. Think people working remotely, digital nomads, not necessarily the poorest and a group some countries do welcome. Cambodia hasn't discovered them yet.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:55 pmI was thinking along the same lines, is the OP talking about people who currently obtain their visas because they legitimately qualify for them or for those who don't?John Bingham wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:50 pm How long before visas become hard to get ( for dodgy people with no valid paperwork)?
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
They used to be able to obtain an EB extension without questions asked. And still were until October 2022, although with fake paperwork. The question is when the law will actually be enforced and they can not apply anymore.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:08 pmIf there is no legal visa available for you then you shouldn't be here. Not really that complicated is it? Go be a digital nomad somewhere else, especially as I bet they don't pay any VAT or withholding tax or tax on your earnings to the Cambodian governmentKammekor wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 6:04 pmFor many people the problem is there is no legal visa available. Think people working remotely, digital nomads, not necessarily the poorest and a group some countries do welcome. Cambodia hasn't discovered them yet.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:55 pmI was thinking along the same lines, is the OP talking about people who currently obtain their visas because they legitimately qualify for them or for those who don't?John Bingham wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:50 pm How long before visas become hard to get ( for dodgy people with no valid paperwork)?
About your tax rant... Cambodia lacks the legal framework to pay those taxes.
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
Bye bye non working foreign parents of Cambodian children .Bye bye non working legal spouses of Cambodian citizen.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:08 pmIf there is no legal visa available for you then you shouldn't be here.Kammekor wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 6:04 pmFor many people the problem is there is no legal visa available. Think people working remotely, digital nomads, not necessarily the poorest and a group some countries do welcome. Cambodia hasn't discovered them yet.Bluenose wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 5:55 pmI was thinking along the same lines, is the OP talking about people who currently obtain their visas because they legitimately qualify for them or for those who don't?John Bingham wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 4:50 pm How long before visas become hard to get ( for dodgy people with no valid paperwork)?
Re: How long before visas become hard to get?
About your tax rant... Cambodia lacks the legal framework to pay those taxes.
[/quote]
No, it doesn't, you register your business. If your business is completely unconnected with your being in Cambodia then you are not entitled to a long-term visa.
[/quote]
No, it doesn't, you register your business. If your business is completely unconnected with your being in Cambodia then you are not entitled to a long-term visa.
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