Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Visa Screenings Gets Tougher, Personal Email, Social Media Accounts to be Scrutinized

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2017 12:58 PM
    New visa screenings would require the applicant to share with visa officer all phone numbers, emails and social media accounts used in the last five years.
     
    The Trump administration has instructed all its diplomatic missions worldwide to identify certain groups that need extra scrutiny and adopt a rigorous vetting process for issuing visas.
     
    Those applying for an American visa - including tourist and business visas - would be asked to furnish details of their employment and residence for the last 15 years and all the phone numbers they used in the previous five years, a diplomatic cable issued by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, said.
     
    The cable was sent after President Donald Trump signed a revised executive order restricting travel from six Muslim-majority Muslim countries on March 6. 
     
    The cable dated March 15 says these additional protocols have been put in place to prevent the entry into the US of foreign nationals who may aid, support or commit violent, criminal or terrorist acts and ensure that those allowed to come in are rigorously vetted.   
     
    The classified cable asks all its overseas diplomatic posts to immediately draw a set of criteria for a rigorous vetting process for issuing visas to foreign nationals.
     
     
    It was not clear if the move will have any impact on Indians.
     
    The cable instructed visa issuing officers to ask additional questions to the applicants. It would also require the applicant to share with visa officer all phone numbers, emails and social media accounts
    used in the last five years.
     
    Tillerson's cable also restricts the number of interviews one visa officer can do every day. "In order to ensure that proper focus is given to each application, posts should generally not schedule more
    than 120 visa interviews per consular adjudicator per day," the cable said.
     
    At the same time, it acknowledged that this might result in interview appointment backlogs.
     
    "Consular officers should not hesitate to refuse any case presenting security concerns," Tillerson wrote in the cable."All visa decisions are national security decisions," he added. Immigration attorneys said the latest move would slow down the visa issuing process and result in backlogs.
     
    "This will certainly slow down the screening process and impose substantial burden on the applicants. It will make it much harder and create substantial delays," said Greg Chan, director of American Immigration Lawyers Association.
     
     
    In 2016, the US State Department issued more than 10 million non-immigrant visas and more than 617,000 immigrant visas.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Diaspora Feature: Capturing Success Of Indians In Europe

    Diaspora Feature: Capturing Success Of Indians In Europe
    With the Indian diaspora in the EU estimated to be six million plus or about 20 percent of the total population, the concept was given a go-ahead to feature and highlight the respectively little known aspects of Indians in Europe, who have become an "integral part of the community."

    Diaspora Feature: Capturing Success Of Indians In Europe

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive
      The Indian community in Australia is growing rapidly. The increase in numbers is complemented by an increase in the average income of the Indian diaspora settled down under.

    Despite Setbacks, Indians Keep Australian Dream Alive

    Hillary Clinton's Quebec Ancestry Dates Back To New France

    MONTREAL — If Hillary Clinton wins Tuesday's election, Canada's relationship with the White House could soon be cast as a family affair, thanks to the presidential candidate's well-documented French-Canadian ancestry.

    Hillary Clinton's Quebec Ancestry Dates Back To New France

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches
    Supreet Kaur - who was visiting her family in Perth - was ordered to undergo a crucial CT scan but staff at Fiona Stanley Hospital allegedly ignored her doctor's referral, The West Australian reported.

    Healthy Indo-Australian Engineer Supreet Kaur, 27, Dies After Complaining Of 'Crippling' Headaches

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump
    Obama repeatedly told the crowd to "hold up" as Hillary Clinton's supporters started booing a man who stood up with the sign supporting the Republican presidential nominee.

    Barack Obama Shouts At Supporters, Defends Man Backing Donald Trump

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore
    Krishnan Karunakaran had slashed throat of his 38-year-old wife Boomichelvi Ramasamy in October 2013 after she rebuffed his demands to help him stay in Singapore by getting his visa extended and not let him see their one-year-old daughter.

    Indian National Sentenced For Slashing Ex-Wife's Throat In Singapore