Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Bureacracy in South America

So there's not been a whole lot going on since I got here in Ecuador. Mostly just taking care of boring government stuff. Yesterday we went to get our "censos" which are our Ecuadorian ID's. I won't go into details but mainly this will keep us out of trouble with the cops without having to carry around our passport everywhere. It was quite a fiasco to get this done. I'll start at the beginning. We (us 5 missionaries and an Ecuadorian who works for the IMB and does this stuff all the time) get out the cab at the migration office. First we went next door to get little photos taken. I don't know what for, as they're smaller than passport size (which we already had) and we never actually used them. But hey, there's Latin American bureacracy for you already...you never know what they'll want you to have with you. Then we go next door into the migration office and take a number and sit in the waiting room. After a bit it's our turn and I go up to the desk and hand him my papers. It all seems to be going well and unexpectedly smoothly until we notice that he's only giving me my censo validity for one year. Which makes no sense because our visas are valid for two years. He explains that our visas were only registered at the Ecuadorian embassy for one year and so there's nothing he can do. I don't really know what that meant since someone else took our visas to be registered when we arrived in-country, but apparently he wasn't going to budge. So we all got up and took a cab over to the other migration office. Our Ecuadorian friend exlained that we would have to re-register our visas, this time for two years, and apply for the censos again. However the good news was that we could do both at this one office. So...we took a number and sat in the waiting room again. Our friend got our visas registered correctly and then waited in line a very long time only to find out that they would not process our censos at this office. So...we left and took a cab back to the first office. We took a number and sat in the waiting room. Finally it was our turn again...back at the exact same person as an hour and a half before...and this time it worked. A proccess that was very easy and should have taken approximately thirty minutes took about three hours. So there's a taste of what simple government issues are like here in Ecuador. And from what I hear that was pretty mild...

1 comment:

  1. wow..what an experience. I am glad it worked our in the end.

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