- Internal passport
An internal passport is an
identity document that can be compared toidentity card used in some countries to control the internal movement and residence of people. Countries that currently have internal passports includeRussia ,Ukraine ,China andNorth Korea .In the past, internal passports were used by
Imperial Russia , theSoviet Union , theOttoman Empire and during theapartheid era inSouth Africa .Soviet Union
Internal passports were used in the
Soviet Union for identification of persons for various purposes. In particular, passports were used to control and monitor the place of residence by means of "propiska ", a regulation in the Soviet Union designed to control internal population movement by binding a person to his or her permanent place of residence. Officially, "propiska" was introduced for statistical reasons: since in theplanned economy of the Soviet Union the distribution of goods and services was centralized, the overall distribution of population was to be monitored. For example, a valid "propiska" was necessary to receive higher education or medical treatment. Also, since there was no private ownership of real estate, having a "propiska" for an address meant that you had the right to live there.All residents were required by law to record their address on the document, and to report any changes to a local office of the
Ministry of Internal Affairs (e.g., by the age of 45, a person has to have threephotograph s of themselves in the passport due to the effects ofaging , taken at the age of 16 (when it is issued), 25 and 45). InUkraine , these laws were struck down by its Constitutional Court in 2001 on the grounds of unconstitutionality. InRussia , similar cases have so far failed, and the system remains in place, although largely reduced. The system of internal passport registration remains strongly in place in Moscow, which uses the recent terrorist attacks on that city as a justification for their continued use.People's Republic of China
The
People's Republic of China (PRC) maintains a system of residency registration inmainland China known as "hukou ", by which government permission is needed to formally change one's place of residency. This system effectively controlled internal migration before the 1980s, but market reforms have caused the system to collapse as a means of migration control and an estimated 150 to 200 million people are part of the "blind flow " and have unofficially migrated, generally from poor, rural areas to wealthy, urban ones. Unofficial residents are, however, often denied official services such as education and medical care and are sometimes topics of both social and official discrimination. (A similar system of household registration is maintained in theRepublic of China (Taiwan), but it does not restrict travel like inmainland China .)Hong Kong and Macao residents needHome Return Permit s, issued by the PRC government through theGuangdong Public Security Bureau, to entermainland China . The system was in place when the Hong Kong and Macao were under British and Portuguese rule, and was retained after their sovereignty were transferred to the PRC in 1997 and 1999 respectively under theOne country, two systems policy. The PRC government often denies applications of permits from democracy advocates in Hong Kong. In the other way round, a travelling permit, issued by the PRC government, is required for residents of mainland China to visit Hong Kong or Macao.Other
In
South Africa , thepass laws (notably the Pass Laws Act 1952 which applied until 1986) were a component of theapartheid system. The law regulated where, when, and for how long a person could remain outside theirhomeland , and made it compulsory for all black South Africans over the age of 15 to carry a "pass book" at all times.Some
civil liberties campaigners in western democracies have likened some planned counter-terrorism measures as an akin to the introduction of an internal passport. For instance, Tim Lott, writing in London's "Evening Standard " in December 2002 said that the proposedBritish identity card was a possible pre-cursor to an "internal passport".Similar ardent privacy advocates in the United States, such as Bill Scannell of dontspyon.us, called the CAPPS II plan to color-code air passengers by their potential terrorist status as a prelude to an internal passport. The phrase has not however gained wide currency with the respect to these measures.
Internal passports were also used in the Confederate States of America during its existence.Fact|date=August 2008
ee also
*
Russian passport
*Passport system in the Soviet Union
*Propiska
*Wolf ticket (Russia)
*101st kilometre
*Closed cities References
* [http://www.ukrweekly.com/Archive/2001/470102.shtml Report on Ukraine's Constitutional Court striking down internal passport laws from Ukrainian Weekly]
* [http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/articles/2461267 Tim Lott writing on British "internal passports"]
* [http://www.dontspyonus.com/galileo.html dontspyon.us on CAPPS II]
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