Camouflage passport

A New Granada camouflage passport. The design on this cover includes the name of a country that no longer exists (New Granada) and a coat of arms assembled from the real arms and motto of Dominica (motto: "Après Bondie, C'est La Ter") and a shield of barry wavy design different from that of the Dominican arms.
The arms of Dominica, for comparison

A camouflage passport is a document, designed to look like a real passport, issued in the name of a non-existent country or entity. It may be sold with matching documents, such as an international driver's license, club membership card, insurance documents or similar supporting identity papers.[1] A camouflage passport is not a real, valid passport and is to be distinguished from a valid second passport, which an individual with dual citizenship may be eligible to hold, a novelty fantasy passport, or a fake of a real passport.

  1. ^ "A precaution in your pocket" by Amon Cohen in The Financial Times, 25 August 1997, p. 10. Retrieved 16 February 2014 from ProQuest.

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