The Estonian Finance Ministry said this week it wouldn't be able to supply the extra 70 million kroons needed to complete the Interior Ministry's new identification card project
Published:
20 September 2001 y., Thursday
The Estonian Finance Ministry said this week it wouldn't be able to supply the extra 70 million kroons ($4.12 million) needed to complete the Interior Ministry's new identification card project, meaning people would have to pay for the documents themselves.
The ID card, a plastic card similar to a driving license, would be an alternative means of identification within Estonia.
The card would contain computer encrypted information about the holder. Interior Ministry officials said they need 66.8 million kroons to complete the project.
The cards project is the result of legislation passed by Parliament and that getting the cards issued by next year is crucial as many passports expire then.
Interior Ministry officials believe that Estonian residents won't yet be willing to pay for the cards themselves.
According to Merike Juriloo, a spokeswoman at the Citizenship and Migration Board, about 120,000 passports will expire next year.
Present fees for replacing Estonian passports are 100 kroons and 300 kroons, depending upon the reason.
Šaltinis:
baltictimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Marching through the streets of Ozd around 600 Hungarian Guards staged one of their biggest protests.
more »
If the tyres on your car are under inflated or of poor quality then you may be filling up with fuel more often than you should be.
more »
Pilgrims packed into St Peter's Square in Rome under sunny skies, to mark Palm Sunday. They had gathered to commemorate Jesus Christ's triumphant entry into Jerusalem a week before being crucified.
more »
Amid the backdrop of California's soaring unemployment and the collapse of its housing market, "gold fever" has taken hold of some newly-minted miners.
more »
A group of Roma organisations Thursday honoured the European Parliament for its support of the Roma and their rights during the current legislative term.
more »
Mourners gathered outside the home of Argentina's former president Raul Alfonsin soon after the news of his death emerged.
more »
1 in 3 children in the UK are considered poor - that's more than any other industrialised country.
more »
Planning will reduce the impact of climate change on health, energy supplies, transport systems, farming and tourism.
more »
Urban beekeepers Alison Benjamin and Brian McCallum are on a mission to save the British honey bee. A deadly virus is threatening to wipe out bees in the UK.
more »
The gradual retreat of the death penalty round the world and progress on women's and children's rights are among positive developments noted in the EP's draft annual report on human rights for 2008.
more »