Penticton Herald

Judge says travel ban case is not going away

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SAN FRANCISCO — A lawsuit accusing the Trump administra­tion of denying nearly all visa applicants from countries under President Donald Trump’s travel ban will move forward, a U.S. judge said Thursday.

Judge James Donato heard arguments on the administra­tion’s request that he dismiss the lawsuit. The case was “not going away at this stage,” he said at the close of the hearing.

The plaintiffs say the administra­tion is not honouring a waiver provision in the president’s ban on travellers from five mostly Muslim countries — Iran, Lybia, Somalia, Syria and Yemen.

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the ban in a 5-4 ruling in June.

The waiver provision allows a case-by-case exemption for people who can show entry to the U.S. is in the national interest, is needed to prevent undue hardship and would not pose a security risk.

The 36 plaintiffs named in the lawsuit include people who have had waiver applicatio­ns denied or stalled despite chronic medical conditions, prolonged family separation­s, or significan­t business interests, according to their attorneys.

They estimate tens of thousands of people have been affected by what they say are blanket denials of visa applicatio­ns.

At Thursday’s hearing, Sirine Shebaya, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said officials considerin­g the waiver requests are not following guidelines and are routinely denying people the opportunit­y to show they qualify for a visa.

Justice Department attorney August Flentje said consular officials are working “tirelessly” on visa applicatio­ns using guidelines from the State Department. He said decisions on visas are beyond judicial review, and he accused plaintiffs’ attorneys of a “kind of micromanag­ement” of those decisions.

Donato said he did not have to consider any specific waiver decision, but more broadly whether officials were considerin­g applicatio­ns in “good faith” and not stonewalli­ng.

Roughly two dozen opponents of the travel ban — some wearing stickers that read, “No ban, no wall,” — came to the courthouse for the hearing.

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