Hi Parviz, if you don't mind can you please clarify what exactly happened at the immigration check? Did they check your passports before you were able to check in? They normally ask me, they call it an immigration control. Then after the check in at the border control they only ask for the Uzbek passport. If you were flying to Moscow, you did not even have to show your US passport, did you?
How did you pass the border control in Uzbekistan when you return to the USA? They usually ask you for a US passport or green card. Since dual citizenship is prohibited what did you show them to come back?
@@Parvizdov Thanks. Please clarify, does your US passport have an Uzbek visa? To enter and exit from Uzbekistan if you use a US passport we need a visa or we should show a green card. Give us more details, please. How did you enter and exit from Uzbekistan?
Do you think I can just travel with only my American passport and back, my uzbek passport expired years ago I want to renounce it but I heard it takes a year to process. I just want to see my family this summer for like 2 weeks and leave.like idk who to ask but I know Uzbekistan does NOT recognize dual citizenship. ( not trynna get stuck over there bc I have school in the u.s) do you think it’s possible to only use my American passport to enter and exit like would they even know that I’m an Uzbek citizen bc idk if they search it up in there system or not or would they just think I’m an American tourist.
I have no answer for this. You can always try. I doubt you will get stuck there. Visit the Uzbek embassy so they can give you temporary passport so you can travel back to uzb then apply for the new passport once youre back there.
You legally can not use foreign passports on Uzbek borders if you haven`t renounced your uzbek citizenship. You can either renew your UZB passport to enter UZB, or get the travel document for return to Uzbekistan (O'zbekistonga qaytish uchun guvohnoma) at the embassy.
ayo bruh cool video, I am a citizen of Uzbekistan, and Im curious how to did you move out of Uzb? cuz thats what im kinda struggling with rn, and im trying to relocate anywhere in EU/US/CA and its been my dream since like 15, but I cant seem to find a way atm.
Hey I'm kinda in a similar situation only worse 🤣I'm an Uzbek citizen too, hut I'm stuck in Moscow now cause I have a ton of cats that I need to take with me, so I'm just biting time until I have enough money to relocate to Tashkent with all of them and then from Tashkent to the US. Anyways, so my point is...I dunno how old you are and if you have a degree or not but the best way is education, just apply to any program. There are affordable programs both graduate and undergraduate, like 15.000 USD per year. Then obviously you would need money to support yourself while you are studying. My advice to you is translation and interpretation between importers and exporters. You can work for either one as a freelancer and they can just pay you in cash or wire you a salary to your card. There is an array of responsibilities you could have, you can do just communication interpretation, be it their email correspondence or live Whatsapp conversations. You can do potential client research for them, so sales but without the pressure. You can do secretarial work. Moreover I'm guessing you speak Russian too right? But even if you don't you basically can live in the US, study in some uni to anchor yourself legally and support yourself with overseas work. Like you can do this freelance translation for a company that has nothing to do with US. You can even find 2 or 3 companies but as a student I'm not sure you'll have the time for more than 2 without your grades suffering. Or I dunno how it works in the us but you can work as a freelance translator for notaries, they are always overbooked and need help. So basically language related stuff. I'm saying all this because that's how I live in Moscow. Also if you're still in Uzbekistan that's even better you can foster relationships with Uzbek translation bureaus and notaries and once you have enough to survive in a mid-level us state, like 2000 bucks a month then move to the us and start studying. That way you'll be studying in the us but working freelance for Uzbek notaries and/or translation agencies. The only down side is you'll be paying commission on the money you'll be earning when transferring it from your Uzbek bank account to your us bank account. I have no translation education I'm just someone who attended an American school which wasn't even in America, and I'm 34 and I've been doing this for 10 years now. You can also be a translator for daily hire like say if there is some company flying in from Uzbekistan or Russia for business negotiation purposes, you can get hired for 4-5 days but that requires you to be present there physically. I'd suggest doing freelance work. You can do it on the bus or at any hour of the day. By freelance I mean remote btw. Btw, the 15.000 USD program thing I just pulled that out of my ***. Maybe there are programs much cheaper, I dunno. Maybe 10.000. it's just that the programs I was looking at were 15.000. but maybe there are cheaper choices depending on the state. But honestly my biggest advice make sure you are independent, don't like live in other people houses like friends of friends of friends. They always come to collect later. You can also look into work in Alaska, maybe study and work in Alaska. I heard there are a lot of opportunity for men there. The work is obviously dangerous but I'm sure it pays better than translation and interpretation. Oh and also while you are there studying start looking into how to launch some start up or open some shop or cafe, because the job market there is brutal. Most of my friends that relocated there are either housewives or have teaching jobs. Despite being very bright and promising. You should always strive to do your own thing. So while you are studying start looking into how launch a start up or just register your own company and start seeking law firm advice so in 1 year you'd have consulted at least 20 law firms, that way you'll know who can legit help you and who is just a scammer and can't help you register your own company.
Can anyone advice me for the take uzbekistan citizenship and pasport, becouse my girl friend is uzbek. I need marry her and live thare. Please help me for that
How did you travel with your drone to Uzbekistan hear Uzbekistan did allow to flight drone and people can't bring to Uzbekistan it is illegal and they took and will not give back to you so
Thank you for sharing! Cheers!
Hi Parviz, if you don't mind can you please clarify what exactly happened at the immigration check? Did they check your passports before you were able to check in? They normally ask me, they call it an immigration control. Then after the check in at the border control they only ask for the Uzbek passport. If you were flying to Moscow, you did not even have to show your US passport, did you?
This man said I’m a lil tipsy 🤣 I was dying
How did you pass the border control in Uzbekistan when you return to the USA? They usually ask you for a US passport or green card. Since dual citizenship is prohibited what did you show them to come back?
My U.S passport when they asked me. They stamped my Uzbek one and let me fly out .
@@Parvizdov Thanks. Please clarify, does your US passport have an Uzbek visa? To enter and exit from Uzbekistan if you use a US passport we need a visa or we should show a green card. Give us more details, please. How did you enter and exit from Uzbekistan?
@@Parvizdov yes please
Парвиз мултар видео монет. Good luck👏👏👍
💛
очаровательный
Salam.
Do you think I can just travel with only my American passport and back, my uzbek passport expired years ago I want to renounce it but I heard it takes a year to process. I just want to see my family this summer for like 2 weeks and leave.like idk who to ask but I know Uzbekistan does NOT recognize dual citizenship. ( not trynna get stuck over there bc I have school in the u.s) do you think it’s possible to only use my American passport to enter and exit like would they even know that I’m an Uzbek citizen bc idk if they search it up in there system or not or would they just think I’m an American tourist.
I have no answer for this. You can always try. I doubt you will get stuck there. Visit the Uzbek embassy so they can give you temporary passport so you can travel back to uzb then apply for the new passport once youre back there.
You legally can not use foreign passports on Uzbek borders if you haven`t renounced your uzbek citizenship. You can either renew your UZB passport to enter UZB, or get the travel document for return to Uzbekistan (O'zbekistonga qaytish uchun guvohnoma) at the embassy.
If i get visit visa of usbakistan then I can get citizenship please guide me or make video clip brother
Iloji bormi?
ayo bruh cool video, I am a citizen of Uzbekistan, and Im curious how to did you move out of Uzb? cuz thats what im kinda struggling with rn, and im trying to relocate anywhere in EU/US/CA and its been my dream since like 15, but I cant seem to find a way atm.
Hey I'm kinda in a similar situation only worse 🤣I'm an Uzbek citizen too, hut I'm stuck in Moscow now cause I have a ton of cats that I need to take with me, so I'm just biting time until I have enough money to relocate to Tashkent with all of them and then from Tashkent to the US. Anyways, so my point is...I dunno how old you are and if you have a degree or not but the best way is education, just apply to any program. There are affordable programs both graduate and undergraduate, like 15.000 USD per year. Then obviously you would need money to support yourself while you are studying. My advice to you is translation and interpretation between importers and exporters. You can work for either one as a freelancer and they can just pay you in cash or wire you a salary to your card. There is an array of responsibilities you could have, you can do just communication interpretation, be it their email correspondence or live Whatsapp conversations. You can do potential client research for them, so sales but without the pressure. You can do secretarial work. Moreover I'm guessing you speak Russian too right? But even if you don't you basically can live in the US, study in some uni to anchor yourself legally and support yourself with overseas work. Like you can do this freelance translation for a company that has nothing to do with US. You can even find 2 or 3 companies but as a student I'm not sure you'll have the time for more than 2 without your grades suffering. Or I dunno how it works in the us but you can work as a freelance translator for notaries, they are always overbooked and need help. So basically language related stuff. I'm saying all this because that's how I live in Moscow. Also if you're still in Uzbekistan that's even better you can foster relationships with Uzbek translation bureaus and notaries and once you have enough to survive in a mid-level us state, like 2000 bucks a month then move to the us and start studying. That way you'll be studying in the us but working freelance for Uzbek notaries and/or translation agencies. The only down side is you'll be paying commission on the money you'll be earning when transferring it from your Uzbek bank account to your us bank account. I have no translation education I'm just someone who attended an American school which wasn't even in America, and I'm 34 and I've been doing this for 10 years now.
You can also be a translator for daily hire like say if there is some company flying in from Uzbekistan or Russia for business negotiation purposes, you can get hired for 4-5 days but that requires you to be present there physically. I'd suggest doing freelance work. You can do it on the bus or at any hour of the day. By freelance I mean remote btw.
Btw, the 15.000 USD program thing I just pulled that out of my ***. Maybe there are programs much cheaper, I dunno. Maybe 10.000. it's just that the programs I was looking at were 15.000. but maybe there are cheaper choices depending on the state. But honestly my biggest advice make sure you are independent, don't like live in other people houses like friends of friends of friends. They always come to collect later.
You can also look into work in Alaska, maybe study and work in Alaska. I heard there are a lot of opportunity for men there. The work is obviously dangerous but I'm sure it pays better than translation and interpretation.
Oh and also while you are there studying start looking into how to launch some start up or open some shop or cafe, because the job market there is brutal. Most of my friends that relocated there are either housewives or have teaching jobs. Despite being very bright and promising. You should always strive to do your own thing. So while you are studying start looking into how launch a start up or just register your own company and start seeking law firm advice so in 1 year you'd have consulted at least 20 law firms, that way you'll know who can legit help you and who is just a scammer and can't help you register your own company.
Uzbekistan doesn’t not allow dual citizenship. Just FYI
😂
Can anyone advice me for the take uzbekistan citizenship and pasport, becouse my girl friend is uzbek. I need marry her and live thare. Please help me for that
How did you travel with your drone to Uzbekistan hear Uzbekistan did allow to flight drone and people can't bring to Uzbekistan it is illegal and they took and will not give back to you so
They took my drone away and returned it when I flew out from Tashkent
@@Parvizdov really? It was mini drone or bigger ? Because I don’t brought my own drone to uzbekistan
@@Parvizdov dji mini drone I bought from Costco wholesale
@@Parvizdov nice video I and it is very helpful to who didn’t know how to use at passport control
@@Parvizdov can you answer to one my question please?
O'zbekcha gapir uka, hammaga tushunarlik bo'ladi. Amerikani fuqaroligini olib O'zbekliging esingdan chiqib ketdimi
Man Inglis tilida video qilaman. Uzbekchaga tarjima kanal ochamiz yaqin orada xudo xolasa
@@Parvizdov Кутамиз бро
you give a way, if you got extra money ))))
I did 👌🏼
@@Parvizdov keep it up bro )))