Selling the bike with a 'poder' I understand to be a kind of unofficial sale. Officially you are borrowing his bike (perpetually). But actually you paid him for it.
Hopefully it's good enough for my purposes (traveling around SA except Chile), but what you write about Peru is a show-stopper.
EDIT: Doing some research..
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https://www.aduana.cl/consejos-para-...21/163933.html
Page from the Chilean Goverment says to enter Peru with a vehicle..
Para ingresar al Perú le solicitarán que dicha autorización notarial esté debidamente legalizada con los timbres y estampillas del Consulado peruano en Chile.
= To enter Peru they will request that the notarization is duly authenticated with the stamp of the Peruvian Consulate in Chile.
Maybe the Peruvian embassy here in Colombia is good enough? :-/ Otherwise if someone has a scan of said stamp..
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http://www.mincetur.gob.pe/turismo/g...a/ingreso.html
Section 3.2.1.3
To take a vehicle into the country, the presence of it's owner is mandatory.
This information could be abridged though.
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http://www.sunat.gob.pe/legislacion/...inta-pg.16.htm
This seems to be the procedure the Peruvian border guards should follow. No mention about 'poder's that I can see, just that you should be the owner. This doesn't seem to have changed since 2000 though.
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More useful than any of this, has anyone tried it recently?
EDIT: This is quite specific so I'll make a new thread.
Last edited by DavidZweig; 20 Nov 2015 at 08:08.
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