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  • Bahrain can be reached by air, road and sea.

    International Airport
    Bahrain International Airport is the premier hub airport in the Middle East.

    It is strategically located in the Northern Gulf between the major markets of Saudi Arabia and Iran, the airport has the widest range and highest frequency of regional services with ideal connections to major international destinations in Europe, Asia , Africa , the Far East and Australasia.

    Bus and taxi services run across the causeway to the main island (travel time - 15 minutes). Airport facilities include banks duty-free shops first aid bars snack bars restaurants nursery tourist information (all 24-hour) post office (open 0700-1500 and 1700-0100) car hire and car parking.

    Approximate flight times:
    From Bahrain to London is 6 hours to Los Angeles is 21 hours and to New York is 14 hours.

    Departure tax:
    BD3 for international departures except for children under two years of age.

    Website: http://www.bahrainairport.com


    Sea
    There are three main ports of entry for dhows and other seafaring craft at Mina Salman Mina Manama and Mina Muharraq. These ports offer a quick and efficient entry into the country from all parts of the world. The deep-water oil tanker terminals are on the north east side of the island.


    Road Links
    Bahrain to Saudi Arabia
    The King Fahad causeway is a 27 Km long road link from Bahrain to Saudi Arabia. Major population centres of theEastern Province are within a 30-minute drive, with driving time to Riyadh and Kuwait averaging four hours.

    Foreign visitors should note that Saudi Arabia has its own visa requirements.

    Bahrain to Qatar
    By 2012 it should be possible to drive from Bahrain to Qatar via a new causeway.

    The Friendship Causeway as it is known will be a 40km long, fixed link structure, making it the longest in the world. It will run from from Bahrain’s East coast, just south of Manama to near the Zubarah Fortress on Qatar’s West coast.

    Two 400m bridges will form a part of the causeway, to allow boat navigation to continue along the coast.

    Once completed, it will mean that the whole GCC region will be accessible by road from Bahrain.

    The development is a joint venture between the French construction company Vinci,  Qatar’s Diar development company. and the Qatar-Bahrain Causeway Foundation.

    Visa requirements

    British citizens and Gulf Cooperation Council nationals (GCC -- Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and the Sultanate of Oman) do not need visas to enter Bahrain. Britons may stay up to one month while GCC nationals are free to stay as long as they like.

    On production of a confirmed return or onward air ticket, passport-holders of most other western nations can get a 72-hour transit visa or a 7-day tourist visa upon arrival at Bahrain Airport or at the Bahraini customs post on the causeway from Saudi Arabia. The 72-hour visa costs BD4 and the 7-day one BD8, payable in either Bahraini or Saudi currency. In the transit lounge at the airport there is a money changer. Arrivals at the airport are often asked to show an onward or return air ticket.

    Israeli stamps in your passport mean you will not be admitted to Bahrain.

    One problem with arriving in Bahrain without a visa is that Bahrain does not recognize the idea of naturalization. In other words, if you are an Indian-born American or Briton who is a naturalized citizen of either country, you remain, as far as Bahraini immigration officials are concerned, an Indian, which means you cannot be issued with a visa at the airport. The best and safest way around this possible problem is to have your visa arranged by one of the larger hotels in Bahrain. (See below.)

    Whatever your national background, if you classify yourself as a journalist, writer or editor, you stand a good chance of being refused admittance to Bahrain unless the Ministry of Information is sponsoring your visa. This glitch is also applicable to British citizens even if they are on holiday or in transit for a single night. The ministry normally takes about a week to arrange visas.

    Women travelling alone may also experience difficulty in being granted visas at the airport. The rules pertaining to unaccompanied females seem to change frequently. Older women will probably have no problem but younger ones would do well to book a room at a hotel and have the hotel arrange the visa.

    Drivers coming from Saudi Arabia are required to sign a guarantee promising to take the car out of Bahrain after a specified time. This paper is very important, as it must be turned in to customs on the way out of the country. A mandatory insurance fee of BD1.5 or SR15 is levied upon each car crossing the causeway.

    Arranging a visa through a hotel
    A hotel in Bahrain can act as your sponsor. In order to arrange this, send the hotel a fax at least three weeks prior to the date you wish to arrive in Bahrain. Include all your passport data as well as arrival and departure times and the purpose of your visit (tourism is acceptable).

    You should give exact information about the time and flight you will arrive on. It is wise to include a telephone number and possibly a fax number where you can be reached. Obviously, it is also a good idea to reconfirm everything by phone a few days before your arrival. The hotel is then your sponsor and the small visa fee -- usually under BD5 -- will be added to your bill. The visa can be collected at the airport, port or on the causeway from Saudi Arabia.

    It is unfortunately true that hotels are less eager to arrange visas than they once were. If you can give them a good reason, they will do so though they are happy to extend your visa once you are in the country and are staying in one of their rooms.

    Extending Visas
    Hotels that can obtain visas can also get them extended. They do prefer, however, to have you get a 72-hour transit visa and then let them handle the extension. The procedure is a simple one: pay the hotel a few dinars -- BD8 plus a hotel charge of BD 2-BD4 -- for a one week extension.

    The government is very intolerant of people staying in the country and working on a tourist visa. If you want to stay in the country for more than two weeks, you will almost certainly be asked to explain your reasons.
     
    June 2009 News:
    Kuwaiti General Administration for Immigration's Director-General Brigadier Kamel al-Awadhi has told the Kuna news agency that GCC immigration chiefs are expected to approve a single visa application system that will enable Gulf visitors to tour all the six GCC member countries. During a meeting of immigration chiefs in Abu Dhabi, the Gulf delegates will also adopt an overture to give foreign residents in GCC countries a 'double residency permit' in order to allow them to study and open offices in any GCC country, he added.







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