Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Trump Administration Approves Tougher Visa Vetting, Including Social Media Checks

IANS, 01 Jun, 2017 12:59 PM
    The Trump administration has rolled out a new questionnaire for US visa applicants worldwide that asks for social media handles for the last five years and biographical information going back 15 years.
     
    The new questions, part of an effort to tighten vetting of would-be visitors to the US, was approved on May 23 by the Office of Management and Budget despite criticism from a range of education officials and academic groups during a public comment period.
     
    Critics argued that the new questions would be overly burdensome, lead to long delays in processing and discourage international students and scientists from coming to the US.
     
    Under the new procedures, consular officials can request all prior passport numbers, five years’ worth of social media handles, email addresses and phone numbers and 15 years of biographical information including addresses, employment and travel history. (http://bit.ly/2qBSrpv)
     
    Officials will request the additional information when they determine “that such information is required to confirm identity or conduct more rigorous national security vetting,” a State Department official said on Wednesday.
     
     
    The State Department said earlier the tighter vetting would apply to visa applicants “who have been determined to warrant additional scrutiny in connection with terrorism or other national security-related visa ineligibilities.” President Donald Trump has vowed to increase national security and border protections, proposing to give more money to the military and make Mexico pay to build a wall along the southern US border.
     
    He has tried to implement a temporary travel ban on people from six Muslim-majority nations that a US appeals court refused to reinstate, calling it discriminatory and setting the stage for a showdown in the Supreme Court.
     
    The Office of Management and Budget granted emergency approval for the new questions for six months, rather than the usual three years.
     
    While the new questions are voluntary, the form says failure to provide the information may delay or prevent the processing of an individual visa application.
     
    Immigration lawyers and advocates say the request for 15 years of detailed biographical information, as well as the expectation that applicants remember all their social media handles, is likely to catch applicants who make innocent mistakes or do not remember all the information requested.
     
     
    The new questions grant “arbitrary power” to consular officials to determine who gets a visa with no effective check on their decisions, said Babak Yousefzadeh, a San Francisco-based attorney and president of the Iranian American Bar Association.
     
    “The United States has one of the most stringent visa application processes in the world,” Yousefzadeh said. “The need for tightening the application process further is really unknown and unclear.”

    MORE International ARTICLES

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam
    Bharat Kumar Patel was arrested for his role in the fraud and money-laundering scheme alongside 55 other individuals and five call centres in an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in the Southern District of Texas on October 19.

    43-Yr-Old Indian In US Pleads Guilty To Running Call Centre Scam

    Wife Of Indian Techie Who Killed Himself In Us Attempts Suicide

    Wife Of Indian Techie Who Killed Himself In Us Attempts Suicide
    Swati consumed toilet cleaner at her house in Kuthapet area. Family members rushed her to a hospital, where her condition was critical.

    Wife Of Indian Techie Who Killed Himself In Us Attempts Suicide

    Indian Students Will Continue To Be In Demand In The US

    Indian Students Will Continue To Be In Demand In The US
    Indian students will continue to be in demand in the United States as they have been gaining advanced knowledge and technical skills, experts feel.

    Indian Students Will Continue To Be In Demand In The US

    US 'Mother Of All Bombs' Killed 36 Islamic State Militants In Afghanistan

    US 'Mother Of All Bombs' Killed 36 Islamic State Militants In Afghanistan
    As many as 36 suspected Islamic State militants were killed in Afghanistan when the United States dropped “the mother of all bombs”, its largest non-nuclear device ever unleashed in combat, the Afghan Defence Ministry said on Friday.

    US 'Mother Of All Bombs' Killed 36 Islamic State Militants In Afghanistan

    Indian Doctor Charged With Female Genital Mutilation On Girls In United States

    Indian Doctor Charged With Female Genital Mutilation On Girls In United States
    A 44-year-old Indian-origin woman doctor has been arrested and charged with performing genital mutilation on girls aged six to eight, believed to be the first such in the US.

    Indian Doctor Charged With Female Genital Mutilation On Girls In United States

    WATCH: US Sikhs Launch Ad Campaign 'WE ARE SIKHS' To Spread Awareness About Sikhism

    WATCH: US Sikhs Launch Ad Campaign 'WE ARE SIKHS' To Spread Awareness About Sikhism
    With over 65 per cent of Americans ignorant about Sikhism, the Sikhs in the US are launching a million-dollar awareness campaign to inform them about their religion amid a spike in hate crimes against the minority community in the country. 

    WATCH: US Sikhs Launch Ad Campaign 'WE ARE SIKHS' To Spread Awareness About Sikhism