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Posted

My Thai wife and I are planning a trip overseas with our two kids and she wants to bring her teenaged son (from her first marriage) who presently lives upcountry with her sister.

His last name is the same as his father's - who hasn't been supporting him for more than 5 years now. The father lives in another province for about 6 years.

Does anyone know if the father (who we may not even be able to contact now) must jointly attend the passport office with my wife to get the boy a passport? Apparently both parents must sign because the boy (14) is a minor and to prevent separated parents trying to 'kidnap' their estranged kids.

For obvious reasons, neither my wife - nor I - want contact with the ex-sami.

Posted
My Thai wife and I are planning a trip overseas with our two kids and she wants to bring her teenaged son (from her first marriage) who presently lives upcountry with her sister.

His last name is the same as his father's - who hasn't been supporting him for more than 5 years now. The father lives in another province for about 6 years.

Does anyone know if the father (who we may not even be able to contact now) must jointly attend the passport office with my wife to get the boy a passport? Apparently both parents must sign because the boy (14) is a minor and to prevent separated parents trying to 'kidnap' their estranged kids.

For obvious reasons, neither my wife - nor I - want contact with the ex-sami.

Yes they certainly do if they are going to Australia,don't know about other countries.

My fiancee had to go to court to get total custody and permission for her son to be approved to travel even though she or the child of 12yrs has never seen or heard from the father.

Its not a real costly thing and in my our case it might be that later I will want to change his name or adopt him what ever the case maybe when we marry.

I would be fairly sure for other countries it would be similar.

Posted
My Thai wife and I are planning a trip overseas with our two kids and she wants to bring her teenaged son (from her first marriage) who presently lives upcountry with her sister.

His last name is the same as his father's - who hasn't been supporting him for more than 5 years now. The father lives in another province for about 6 years.

Does anyone know if the father (who we may not even be able to contact now) must jointly attend the passport office with my wife to get the boy a passport? Apparently both parents must sign because the boy (14) is a minor and to prevent separated parents trying to 'kidnap' their estranged kids.

For obvious reasons, neither my wife - nor I - want contact with the ex-sami.

This isn't directly related since you are obviously talking about a round trip, but I always wondered how my wife pulled off getting her kids here. When I got married WAY back in Dec 75, my wife came back to the U.S. with me. Six months later she went back to Thailand. She went to her ex mother-in-law's house and got her two kids (ages 5 and 7) and told them she was taking them to Bangkok for a visit. A week later, I met all three at the airport in San Francisco. I don't know how she pulled it off. Then a few years later, the father's paternal rights were stripped by a district judge in the U.S. (imagine--the guy didn't respond to legal notices in the Las Vegas Review-Journal) and I adopted them.

Posted (edited)
Yes they certainly do if they are going to Australia,don't know about other countries.

My fiancee had to go to court to get total custody and permission for her son to be approved to travel even though she or the child of 12yrs has never seen or heard from the father.

Its not a real costly thing and in my our case it might be that later I will want to change his name or adopt him what ever the case maybe when we marry.

I would be fairly sure for other countries it would be similar.

Cost us about 5000 Baht for lawyer to handle the court matters and a whole lot of hassle to get ALL the family members together, at the same place, at the same time to sign declarations to the effect that TW was the childs sole means of support and that the father was untraceable. Edited by bdenner
Posted

Hi thaigene2,

In my case we got his and my parents along to the local goverment office to sign a dcoument

to state that I had the soul responibility for caring for my two boys.

Unfortunatly when we when to got the boys passport they kept the orginal and gave us a photocopy

which when we got to Aus Embassy they wouldn't except. So another another trip back to get another original copy made up. Which was no easy matter.

My advise would be to get 2 or more with offical stamp on them.

Nothing worst than having to ask for another orignal to be made up.

Good Luck !!!

And take one day and problem at a time.

Wanphen

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