Originally Posted by
tentseller
I am a case in point.
I was born in HK. The family immigrated to Canada when I was 12. I was issued a UK passport instead of a HK passport. When I became a Canadian Citizen I obtain also a Canadian passport. I also acquired a HK-SAR passport by birth. My Canadian Passport has a paid for PRC Visa even though I do no need one to enter PRC with my HK-SAR passport.
With all these passport one has to know and keep up to date the rights, obligation and issues with each passport entering and visiting each country AND CHOOSE THE PASSPORTS WISELY. What happened in the incidents posted is not an one off occurrence but a enforce policy of countries.
If you think that is a can of worms, my brother married a girl who is Malaysia national. I refuse to cross any border with them anywhere in Asia.
Would you be eligible for a British BNO Passport as well?
Since terrorists don't hijack planes and take hostanges anymore, a second passport is not that useful anymore. (these days, any terrorist who dare stand up are immediately beaten to a pulp by fellow passengers)
Still, when crossing international borders(US or otherwise), it is always wise to keep your "other" passport out of sight. Based on the OP's statement, I guess Taiwan is the only exception?
When I was searching for a good passport holder a few months back, I ended up buying one from Ebay. I did see several advertised as "holds two passports" and the sellers were from Korea, IIRC.
My sister-in-law is dual Aussie/Brit citizen, but she only uses her Aussie passport. The British passport only comes out when she enter the UK, obviously.