The consular office of Venezuela in Barcelona carries out an operation to apostille documents from May 15 to 19. For each one you must bring 60 euros and another 60 for the modification in the system
The Consulate of Venezuela in Barcelona reported on its social networks that a document apostille day is being held for Venezuelans in Spain from this Monday, May 15, to Friday, May 19.
Through their social networks, The consular office in Barcelona indicated that the day includes resetting and modifying data in the electronic legalization and apostille system. The days will be from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm.
Those who can attend the special day of document apostille, according to the portal the Venezuelan Consulate in Barcelona, are:
- People with an appointment already assigned for May 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19;
- People with an appointment assigned for another day;
- People without appointment.
If you are going to attend the conference, keep in mind that you must bring some documents to present as the legal document that you want to have apostilled. It must be duly legalized; Original and copy of the Venezuelan identity card or passport. In the case of the ID, it does not indicate whether or not it may be expired.
*Read also: Everything you need to know to apostille your documents in Venezuela
In addition, you must bring 60 euros for each document to apostille and another 60 to be able to reset and modify the data in the system.
However, the Venezuelan Consulate in Barcelona clarifies that this operation does not include the process of registering citizens in the Criminal Record Management System. He clarifies in a subsequent message on the networks that this document is apostilled free of charge via the internet and not by consular offices.
The Spanish Commission for Aid to Refugees (CEAR) published the Thursday April 12 a report on migration in the Iberian nation, reflecting that Venezuelans and Colombians are the nationalities that requested the most asylum in that country during 2022.
The natives of Venezuela, according to the CEAR registry, recorded 45,748 asylum applications, followed by those from Colombia (36,012), Peru (8,937), Morocco (3,905) and Honduras (3,017).
These requests from citizens of the five mentioned nationalities calculate a total of 118,842 requests for asylum; 82% more than in 2021 but, on the other hand, the Spanish authorities only approved 16.5% of them; placing the Iberian nation in the third country that most rejects asylum applications and the third that receives them the most.
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