The Star Early Edition

US in immigratio­n visa clampdown

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WASHINGTON/NEW YORK: US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has directed US diplomatic missions to identify “population­s warranting increased scrutiny” and toughen screening for visa applicants in those groups, according to diplomatic cables.

He has also ordered a “mandatory social media check” for all applicants who have ever been present in territory controlled by the Islamic State, in what two former US officials said would be a broad, labour-intensive expansion of such screening. Social media screening was now done fairly rarely by consular officials, one of the former officials said.

Four cables, or memos, issued by Tillerson over the past two weeks provide insight into how the US government is implementi­ng what President Donald Trump has called “extreme vetting” of foreigners entering the US, a major campaign promise. The cables also demonstrat­e the administra­tive and logistical hurdles the White House faces in executing its vision.

The memos, which have not been previously reported, provided instructio­ns for implementi­ng Trump’s March 6 revised executive order temporaril­y barring visitors from six Muslim-majority countries and all refugees, as well as a simultaneo­us memorandum mandating enhanced visa screening.

The flurry of cables to US missions abroad issued strict new guidelines for vetting US visa applicants, and then retracted some of them in response to US court rulings that challenged central tenets of Trump’s executive order.

The final cable seen by Reuters, issued on March 17, leaves in place an instructio­n to consular chiefs in each diplomatic mission, or post, to convene working groups of law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce officials to “develop a list of criteria identifyin­g sets of post applicant population­s warranting increased scrutiny”.

Applicants falling within one of these identified population groups should be considered for higher-level security screening, according to the March 17 cable.

Those population groups would probably vary from country to country. Reuters

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