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Filed: Other Timeline
Posted

I sent a email to the consular office in Egypt just to make sure the information I had been reading about marriage in Egypt was current.I got a reply.And for anyone that wants to know here is there response:

Dear Ms. Maranda

You can marry in Egypt now. Attached please find a handout on marriage in Egypt.

Consular Staff

ACS Unit, Cairo, Egypt

MARRIAGE IN EGYPT

The only legal marriage for foreigners in Egypt is a civil ceremony performed at the local marriage court, which is in accordance with Islamic practice. Persons wishing a religious ceremony may arrange for one separately, but it is the civil ceremony that establishes the legal marriage.

Americans wishing to marry in Egypt must take the following steps in order to marry:

Step 1: Visit the American Citizen Services, U.S. Embassy

Address: 5, Tawfik Diab Street (formerly Latin America Street), Garden City, Cairo. Hours: Sunday through Thursday 8:00-11:00 a.m., except the last Tuesday of each month.

At American Citizen Services, you will sign a marriage affidavit that will be notarized by the U.S. Embassy. This affidavit includes your biographic data and your religion. Interfaith marriages are permitted by Egyptian law except in the case of a Muslim woman and a non-Muslim man. The affidavit also mentions that you are free to marry and that the Embassy has no objection to the marriage. Please bring the following:

• Your valid American passport

• Proof of termination of your last marriage, if you were married before. An original or certified copy of the last divorce decree or death certificate must be submitted. There is no need to get this document authenticated or translated into Arabic for the purpose of marriage. The authentication and translation by the Egyptian embassy or consulate in the U.S. may be required later for other purposes. Please note that if you are a female American citizen previously married, you may only remarry in Egypt at least 90 days after your divorce or 130 days after the death of your former spouse. If you are pregnant, you can only remarry after the birth of the baby.

• It is preferable that you bring your fiancé(e).

• The fee is $30.00 or 171.00 LE (cash only).

• If you are a female under the age of 21, you are required to either be accompanied by your father, a guardian, a person in loco parentis, or a written consent from any of the above. The consent should be in English and Arabic. It should be notarized by the Egyptian Embassy or an Egyptian consulate in the U.S. and by the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Egypt.

NOTE: If two American citizens are getting married, they each need separate statements.

Step 2: After obtaining the notarized statement from the U.S. Embassy, you must visit one of the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Authentication Offices.

Addresses: Gameit el Dowal el Arabia Street, Mohandessin, Giza; Ahmed Said Street, Abbassia; or Sabak Street next to the Maryland Gardens in Heliopolis. The office hours are Saturday through Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs will certify the statement for a fee of 11.00LE.

Step 3: After obtaining the certification from the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, you must visit the Egyptian Ministry of Justice.

Address: Egyptian Ministry of Justice Annex (Office of Marriage of Foreigners), 4th floor, Lazoughly Square, Abdin, Cairo. Open Saturday through Wednesday from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Thursday from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.

The Ministry of Justice will register your marriage. Forms to be completed at the marriage court can only be obtained on the wedding day or the day before. The following are required:

• Proof of identity (a passport) for both parties, a photocopy of the passport data page, the Egyptian entry visa and the residency stamp if you obtained one.

• Egyptian I.D. (Egyptian passport or the National ID) and a photocopy of it if one of the parties is Egyptian

• Five personal photos for each party.

• A 50.00LE “Ta’meen Igtimaei” stamp (purchased at any Egyptian post office)

• Two male witnesses with identification documents (passport or I.D. card) must be present to sign the marriage documents. It is preferable to bring your own witnesses, such as friends or travel agents.

• Original proof of termination of previous marriage if you were married before. No authentication or translation is required.

• A routine physical exam performed by an Egyptian doctor is sometimes required if the person appears unhealthy.

It will take at least ten business days for a marriage certificate to be issued by the Ministry of Justice. The marriage certificate must be picked up by one of the parties.

Fees to complete the marriage at the Ministry of Justice:

If both parties are Muslim, the fee is two percent of the dowry (a minimum of 40LE).

If both parties are Christians, a dowry is not required, the fee is 35.00LE.

To use the marriage certificate in the U.S., it should be translated into English by the Egyptian Ministry of Justice Translation Office (the fee is 40.00LE). It takes 4-7 days to receive the translation, which must then be authenticated by the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (11.00LE) and authenticated by the American Citizen Services Unit at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo (171.00LE or $30.00). The Ministry of Justice's Translation Office is located at the Ministry of Justice Building, 13th floor, Lazoughly Square, Abdin, Cairo.

If you have any questions, please send an email to the US Embassy at consularcairoacs@state.gov or call us at (202) 2797-2301.

Americans wishing to apply for immigration visas for their spouses must take the following steps:

If you reside in the United States, please start the petition process by filing a Form I-130, “Petition for Alien Relative.” The I-130 is available on the U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services (USCIS) website at www.uscis.gov under “Immigration Forms.” Please note: USCIS processes the Form I-130 as a visa number becomes available. Filing and approval of an I-130 is only the first step in helping a spouse immigrate to the United States. The fee is $355 and you may file online or send in the paper application to the appropriate U.S. address (listed on the website).

If you are a resident of Egypt, you may apply for an immigrant visa for your spouse at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. You, the petitioner, must have maintained continuous residency in Egypt a minimum of the preceding six months in order to demonstrate residency to the Consular Officer. Please call 0900-70600 to make an appointment for an interview. Feel free to browse our website at http://egypt.usembassy.gov/consular/iv.htm for more information.

Love.Live.Learn

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Filed: Country: Palestine
Timeline
Posted

Wow I'm sure this will be extremely helpful information to many people.

Thanks for posting it ! :thumbs:

(F)

-MK

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شارع النجمة في بيت لحم

Too bad what happened to a once thriving VJ but hardly a surprise

al Nakba 1948-2015
66 years of forced exile and dispossession


Copyright © 2015 by PalestineMyHeart. Original essays, comments by and personal photographs taken by PalestineMyHeart are the exclusive intellectual property of PalestineMyHeart and may not be reused, reposted, or republished anywhere in any manner without express written permission from PalestineMyHeart.

Filed: Country: Jamaica
Timeline
Posted

Wow, that seems like a whole lot of hoops to jump through!

I feel sorry for Muslim women wanting to marry non-Muslim men.

Life's just a crazy ride on a run away train

You can't go back for what you've missed

So make it count, hold on tight find a way to make it right

You only get one trip

So make it good, make it last 'cause it all flies by so fast

You only get one trip

Filed: Other Timeline
Posted

We had to go through a similar bureaucratic mess to get legally married in Nepal - luckily my FIL knew someone at the gov't office who was able to get the paperwork handled quickly and guide us through the process. I lost count of how many times we had to go to this or that office. The longest wait was for the police report from his village. I also had to go to the US Embassy in KTM to sign an affidavit that I had never been married before - 'Letter of No Contest' - the fee was something like 30$.


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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted

its good to know there is a way :thumbs:

K1 process

10/05/2006 filled :)

05/03/2007 interview -> AP -> hell -> AP -> 9 months of AP Hell - 2 home visits :(

01/26/2008 visa in hand with a typo :(

02/03/2008 2 weeks more of waiting.... Visa in hand...... :)

2/20/2008 on US soil :)

2/21/2008 marriage :)

AOS

03/12/2008 Sent AOS/Work/Travel

03/16/2008 shows delivered chicago

4/12/2008 check cashed :)

4/13/2008 NOA's for all 3

4/18/2008 bio letter

4/29/2008 bio appt.

5/06/2008 RFE 2007 tax return

5/07/2008 returned RFE overnight

5/08/2008 received-lees summit

5/12/08 case updated online/RFE received

5/27/08 checked the website for the third time today -says AP and EAD approval letter sent 5/24- it was not updated online till today - and no e-mail update either

5/27/08 emails sent in afternoon AP and EAD approvals

5/29/08 AP touch

5/29/08 email EAD card production ordered

6/02/08 AP in hand

6/03/08 email EAD card mailed

6/05/08 EAD card in hand :)

7/28/08 AOS letter received

9/02/08 AOS interview

9/10/08 card production ordered email :)

9/17/08 welcome letter email and snail mail arrive same day

9/19/08 Greencard in hand :)

Filed: Country: Morocco
Timeline
Posted
At American Citizen Services, you will sign a marriage affidavit that will be notarized by the U.S. Embassy. This affidavit includes your biographic data and your religion. Interfaith marriages are permitted by Egyptian law except in the case of a Muslim woman and a non-Muslim man. The affidavit also mentions that you are free to marry and that the Embassy has no objection to the marriage.

I may be completely wrong about this -- I hope so, and please forgive me if I am -- but is this part not where the hangup was, that the U.S. Embassy would not notarize an affidavit stating they had no objection to a marriage?

I'm the USC.

11/05/2007........Conditional permanent residency effective date.

01/10/2008........Two-year green card in hand.

08/08/2009........Our son was born <3

08/08/2009........Filed for removal of conditions.

12/16/2009........ROC was approved.

11/05/2010........Eligible for Naturalization.

03/01/2011........Separated.

11/05/2012........Eligible for Naturalization.

Filed: Country: Morocco
Timeline
Posted
I thought so too but I that is what the email said that I got from the consulars office because that was my understanding as well but I guess they worked it out.

It sure does sound promising.

I'm the USC.

11/05/2007........Conditional permanent residency effective date.

01/10/2008........Two-year green card in hand.

08/08/2009........Our son was born <3

08/08/2009........Filed for removal of conditions.

12/16/2009........ROC was approved.

11/05/2010........Eligible for Naturalization.

03/01/2011........Separated.

11/05/2012........Eligible for Naturalization.

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted

I thought so too but I that is what the email said that I got from the consulars office because that was my understanding as well but I guess they worked it out.

[/quote

Dear I love Ashraf, I was in Cairo in July of 2007 and at that time the embassy did refuse to sign any affidavitl. Are you saying they now will or you think they will? Because as late as July 2007 that was the reason Americans could not marry in Eygpt. They refused to sign the affidavit that the Eygptian government required.

Debarato

Posted

OMG!!! It's true! What she said is true. They even updated the embassy website to reflect everything that she copied here. That is wonderful news for anyone wishing to marry in Egypt. I am so happy they changed it.

Now, I am stuck with a dilemma...Do I keep with the original plan to file the K-1 or do I marry in Egypt when I go on Feb. 20th? I really don't know what the best route to take is now that they have changed it. Can anyone help me to figure this out....and fast! lol! Thanks...

Never, Never, Never Quit!

Filed: K-3 Visa Country: Kuwait
Timeline
Posted

Good to hear that they changed it, I got married in Egypt, at this time they would not sign an affidavit. The embassy did stamp a paper saying they had nothing to do with this. Now the man at the embassy told me that it might not work because it was not the official affidavit, but some times they let it go. We got lucky, plus my husband had friends and of course money always helps change minds in Egypt. :P It is good to see they have come to some understanding on this. By the way what a job the Americans have at the embassy, I need those hours. EASY EASY EASY, Plus I hate that place, I never felt the embassy help me at all. Oh well that was my two cents. Good luck to all of you in this process. :thumbs:

A woman is like a tea bag- you never know how strong she is until she gets in hot water.

Eleanor Roosevelt

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted
OMG!!! It's true! What she said is true. They even updated the embassy website to reflect everything that she copied here. That is wonderful news for anyone wishing to marry in Egypt. I am so happy they changed it.

Now, I am stuck with a dilemma...Do I keep with the original plan to file the K-1 or do I marry in Egypt when I go on Feb. 20th? I really don't know what the best route to take is now that they have changed it. Can anyone help me to figure this out....and fast! lol! Thanks...

my 2 cents, for what it's worth....wait until he gets here to get married. File the K-1 which will allow him to work upon entry for three months and get married in the US. The marriage in the ministry of justice is just about the most unromantic thing you'll ever do. Seriously getting your teeth pulled is more intimate. That way you can have your family with you when you get married here to AND for the year and a half or so of waiting for the visa, you won't be separated from your husband, you'll be separated from your fiance. It really sucks to be married and not be able to be with your husband every day.

"Only from your heart can you touch the sky" - Rumi

Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted
OMG!!! It's true! What she said is true. They even updated the embassy website to reflect everything that she copied here. That is wonderful news for anyone wishing to marry in Egypt. I am so happy they changed it.

Now, I am stuck with a dilemma...Do I keep with the original plan to file the K-1 or do I marry in Egypt when I go on Feb. 20th? I really don't know what the best route to take is now that they have changed it. Can anyone help me to figure this out....and fast! lol! Thanks...

my 2 cents, for what it's worth....wait until he gets here to get married. File the K-1 which will allow him to work upon entry for three months and get married in the US. The marriage in the ministry of justice is just about the most unromantic thing you'll ever do. Seriously getting your teeth pulled is more intimate. That way you can have your family with you when you get married here to AND for the year and a half or so of waiting for the visa, you won't be separated from your husband, you'll be separated from your fiance. It really sucks to be married and not be able to be with your husband every day.

And it sucks to be away from your fiance. :( Either way there's generally some heartache along the way.

Filed: Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted

Figures.

What a pain in the butt they caused for so many people and without us knowing that anything changed at all, they decide to allow marriages again.

grrrr..... :angry:

Allah tries his chosen people through many hardships, but those who persevere through adversity, surrendering themselves before the will of Allah, shall be blessed with a superb reward.

-The Prophet Muhammad (SAW), as reported by Anas bin Malik

A time will come when the sky is torn apart; when the stars scatter, and the ocean drains away; and when the graves are tossed about, and laid open. At that time every man will be told what he has done, and what he has failed to do; and every woman will be told what she has done, and what she has failed to do.

-Qur'an, Al-Infitar, Surah 82:1-5

 
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