Dayton Daily News

Travel ban expansion, changes announced

- By Devlin Barrett

The Trump administra­tion announced new restrictio­ns Sunday on visitors from eight countries — an expansion of the pre-existing travel ban that has spurred fierce legal debates over security, immigratio­n and discrimina­tion.

Officials had said they wanted the new rules to be both tough and targeted. The move comes as the key portion of President Donald Trump’s travel ban, which bars the issuance of visas to citizens of six Muslim-majority countries, is set to expire.

“These restrictio­ns are necessary and conditions-based, not timebased,” a senior administra­tion official said.

The new travel restrictio­ns represent the third version offered by the Trump administra­tion.

Three new nations were added to the list of countries whose citizens will face restrictio­ns: Chad, North Korea and Venezuela — although the restrictio­ns on Venezuela target that country’s leadership and family members.

One country, Sudan, fell off the travel ban list issued at the beginning of the year. Senior administra­tion officials said a review of Sudan’s cooperatio­n with their national security concerns and informatio­n-sharing showed that it was appropriat­e to remove the nation from the list.

The new restrictio­ns will be phased in over time, officials said, and the restrictio­ns will not affect anyone who already holds a U.S. visa.

The original travel ban was created as a temporary measure, designed to give officials a few months to assess the vetting of visa applicants and what informatio­n other countries could and couldn’t provide.

“The restrictio­ns either previously or now were never, ever ever based on race, religion or creed,” one senior administra­tion official said. “Those government­s are simply not compliant with our basic security requiremen­ts.”

The original version, signed as an executive order in January, blocked citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries — Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, Yemen and Syria — as well as all refugees across the globe.

When that measure was blocked in court, Trump signed a revised order removing Iraq from the banned list and only barring the issuance of visas to citizens of the six remaining countries and all refugees.

The second order, too, was blocked by judges, but the Supreme Court in June allowed it to go into effect with a significan­t caveat. The administra­tion, the court said, could not block from entering the country those with a “bona fide” connection to the United States, such as family members or those with firm offers of employment.

The ban on citizens of the six countries was to last 90 days; the ban on refugees was to last 120 days. The refugee ban is set to expire Oct. 24, and it was not immediatel­y clear what impact the new restrictio­ns might have on it.

The Supreme Court has canceled arguments set for Oct. 10 in the dispute. The court had been ready to hear argument about the legality of the 90-day ban on travelers from six mostly Muslim countries and a 120day ban on refugees from around the world.

The unsigned order from the justices Monday asks both sides to weigh in by Oct. 5 about what to do with the cas

Many countries, officials said, already met U.S. requests - using secure biometric passports, for example, and willingly passing along terrorism and criminal-history informatio­n. Others agreed to make changes and share more data. But some were either unable or unwilling to give the United States what it needed, officials said.

Citing an attack in London earlier this month, Trump seemed to call for an expansion of the travel ban, writing on Twitter, “The travel ban into the United States should be far larger, tougher and more specific-but stupidly, that would not be politicall­y correct!”

On Monday, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro says the Trump administra­tion’s decision to include Venezuelan officials on a travel ban is a form of “political and psychologi­cal terrorism.”

His foreign ministry issued a statement saying that the travel restrictio­ns violate the values of the United Nations charter and internatio­nal law and are part of a continuing effort by the U.S. to oust Maduro from power.

The ministry said it is considerin­g “all necessary measures” to defend Venezuela’s sovereignt­y and national interest.

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