Fiji Sun

US expands travel ban to include N Korea

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The United States has expanded its controvers­ial travel ban to include people from North Korea, Venezuela and Chad. The White House said the restrictio­ns follow a review of informatio­n sharing by foreign government­s.

Donald Trump issued a presidenti­al proclamati­on late on Sunday. “Making America safe is my number one priority. We will not admit those into our country we cannot safely vet,” Mr Trump said. The restrictio­ns on Venezuelan­s apply only to government officials and their family members. The three new countries join five others from Mr Trump’s original travel ban: Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, and Somalia. But the new proclamati­on removed restrictio­ns that were placed on Sudan. Mr Trump’s original ban was highly controvers­ial, as it affected six majority-Muslim countries, and was widely labelled a “Muslim ban”.

It was subject to a range of legal challenges and the subject of several large-scale protests, and is due to be considered by the US Supreme Court in October, having been partly reinstated in July. The American Civil Liberties Union rights group said the addition of the new countries “doesn’t obfuscate the real fact that the administra­tion’s order is still a Muslim ban”.

It is not yet clear how the president’s new proclamati­on, which changes several key elements, will affect that legal challenge.

The addition of North Korea and Venezuela now means not all nations on the list are majorityMu­slim.

The criteria for the new ban list is now based on vetting procedures and co-operation, and the restrictio­ns have now been “tailored” on a country-by-country basis:

The White House said North Korea did not co-operate with the US government “in any respect” and failed all requiremen­ts - and so all travel to the US by its citizens has been banned

Chad, while an important counter-terrorism partner, did not share terrorism-related and other public informatio­n the US required - business and tourist visas for its nationals are suspended

Only “certain Venezuelan government officials and their immediate family members” have been banned - its government was recently been hit with economic sanctions by the US, who now say it does not co-operate “in verifying whether its citizens pose national security or public-safety threats” and does not receive deported nationals willingly.

Most of the restrictio­ns come in the form of suspension of B-1 and B-2 business and tourist visas, and they do not appear to be time-limited in the way that Mr Trump’s former executive order was.

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