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    19 commenti

    1. purpleisreality on

      So much text that you can not even read the country’s name properly? *North Macedonia*

    2. v1aknest on

      I mean this is an extreme example. The person has two first and two last names, which is extremely rare, and she’s also Aromanian, which also includes the Aromanian labels on the passport, along with Macedonian, English, and French.

    3. PlamenIB on

      Since Macedonian and Albanian are official and English is “standard” then why it is in French (?) as well?

    4. Sandalwoodincencebur on

      she’s really like an open book, takes a whole new meaning. 😂

    5. CondensedHappiness on

      1 more reason to get a Bulgarian passport, I guess.

    6. Wyand1337 on

      Is the picture on the ID the “prototype picture” for macedonia? The German one looks different (and more like a potato”. Is there a different one for each EU country? Is there a compilation of the “standard citizen” for each country?

    7. Roy4Pris on

      Er, I hope this isn’t a real person’s passport, with their full name, DOB etc…

    8. pureofpure on

      When I read that title, I thought that a region in Greece called Macedonia was issuing passports..

    9. Wooden_Date_4010 on

      Basterebbe un QR : Lo si scannerizza e appaiono i dati su apposita app UE. Sarebbe molto comodo.

    10. Ok-Pineapple2365 on

      When you are citizen of a non existent country…your goverment ads as much text as possible to confuse those who read it.
      There’s no such country named…MKD and no such Nationality as MAKEDOHCKO!

    11. wow, I can’t imagine what it is like to travel to countries like let’s say China. Because it’s already a struggle for me who have a family name with 9 letters and 3 first names. but if it’s cyrillic/greek, i wonder what happens when some people need to manually input it on the keyboard.

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