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Posts Tagged ‘Holiday Closing’
2nd June 2011
US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan: Holiday Closing Schedule 2011
Posted by : admin
Frequent readers of this web log may have taken note of the fact that the administration routinely posts the holiday closing schedules of the various US Missions in Asia as a courtesy to the public-at-large. To quote directly from the official website of the United States Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan:
DATE DAY HOLIDAY
January 2* (US) Sunday New Year’s Day
January 16* (US) Sunday Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
February 15 (AF) Tuesday Liberation Day
February 16** (AF) Wednesday Prophet’s Birthday
February 20* (US) Sunday President’s Day
March 21 (AF) Monday Nawrooz (Afghan New Year – 1390)
April 28 (AF) Thursday Victory Day
May 29* (US) Sunday Memorial Day
July 3* (US) Sunday Independence Day
August 1** (AF) Monday First Day or Ramadan
August 18*** (AF) Thursday Independence Day
Aug 31 – Sept 2** (AF) Wednesday – Friday Eid ul-Fitr
September 4* (US) Sunday Labor Day
September 8*** (AF) Thursday Martyrdom of National Hero Day
October 9* (US) Sunday Columbus Day
November 6-8** (AF) Sunday – Tuesday Eid-e Qurban
November 10* (US) Thursday Veteran’s Day
November 24 (US) Thursday Thanksgiving Day
December 6** (AF) Tuesday 10th of Muharram (Ashura)
December 25 (US) Sunday Christmas DayNotes:
* American holidays marked with an asterisk (*) are observed on a different day than in the US.
** Afghan holidays marked with double asterisks (**) are based on the Islamic Calendar and depend on sightings of the moon. As a holiday approaches, adjustments to this schedule may be made based on local practice and Afghan government announcements.
*** Afghan holidays marked with triple asterisks (***) are observed one day earlier.
Those wishing to visit the official homepage of the United States Embassy in Kabul are encouraged to click HERE.
It may sometimes prove necessary for an American Resident Abroad or an American traveling abroad to acquire documentation (US Passport, Consular Report of Birth Abroad, Notarized affidavit, etc.) which can only be obtained from an American Citizen Services section of a US Embassy or US Consulate overseas. Americans seeking such documentation are well advised to contact an American Citizen Services Section with appropriate Consular jurisdiction.
Those seeking an American non-immigrant visa (such as a B-1 visa, B-2 visa, J-1 visa, or F-1 visa) are likely to see their visa application processed at a non-immigrant visa section of a US Embassy, US Consulate, or American Institute abroad. Meanwhile, those seeking an immigrant visa such as a CR-1 visa or IR-1 visa (for purposes of Consular Processing, the K-1 visa; although a non-immigrant US fiance visa, is treated in much the same way as immigrant visa categories for processing purposes) are likely to see their visa application processed by an Immigrant Visa Unit abroad. Immigrant visas such as those noted above are likely to only be granted pursuant to an initial adjudication of an immigration petition at the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS).
Those seeking visas such as the EB-5 visa or the L-1 visa are well advised to take note of the fact that it is unlikely that a visa application will be adjudicated by a US Post abroad until after an initial immigration petition is approved by USCIS.
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