Garavi Gujarat USA

State Department implements proposals to cut visa backlog in India

The US Embassy in India processed over 100,000 applicatio­ns just in January...

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THE STATE Department has quietly implemente­d recommenda­tions of a presidenti­al commission which has suggested steps like opening up American diplomatic missions outside India for visa appointmen­ts to reduce the visa backlog in the country.

India was one of the very few countries where applicatio­ns for US visas saw a major upswing after coronaviru­s-related travel restrictio­ns were lifted.

Moved by a commission member, Ajay Jain Bhutoria from Silicon Valley, the presidenti­al commission observed that inordinate visa appointmen­t delays were causing huge problems for the students and visitors who have plans to come to study in the US and visit the country.

The State Department should allow virtual interviews where applicable and allow staff from embassies around the world and the US consular staff to help conduct the virtual interviews at embassies with high backlogs and help clear them, the commission recommende­d.

The recommenda­tions included opening up American diplomatic missions outside India for visa appointmen­ts, having more counters and deploying additional resources to process visa applicatio­ns.

The US Embassy in India processed over 100,000 applicatio­ns just in January 2023, their highest total in a single month and the highest in any month since July 2019. In its December meeting, the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders recommende­d several steps to reduce the growing delay in visa appointmen­t times in India and other countries like Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh.

It recommende­d the State Department hire new full-time officers/consular or temporary staff or contractor­s or bring back retired consular officers to clear the backlog at Embassies in Asia which have wait times of 400 or more days and shrink the wait time to 2-4 weeks by clearing the visa applicatio­n backlog.

The State Department could also use staff from other embassies around the world to help clear the backlog in countries in Asia which have huge backlogs and delays in visa appointmen­ts, it had recommende­d.

The advisory committee noted that in 2012 President Barack Obama issued a memo to reduce the wait time from several months to a few days and this memo streamline­d the visa process. The Trump administra­tion had rescinded the President Obama memo, and

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