New York Daily News

IGNORE TRuMP

Judge overrides Prez on visas for Yemenis

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A BROOKLYN federal judge has ordered immigratio­n authoritie­s to print up visas that were promised to roughly 30 Yemeni nationals, but then denied after President Trump’s latest travel ban.

After officials already gave the green light on applicatio­ns to enter the U.S., Judge Brian Cogan said the government needed to honor “its representa­tions to prospectiv­e immigrants” — and do it quickly.

He gave the feds a June 12 deadline to “provide a valid printed visa” to the Yemenis stranded in Djibouti, who have family waiting for them in the states, mostly in New York City.

Many of the recipients are children and senior citizens, their lawyers told the Daily News.

The visa recipients were snagged by the latest iteration of Trump’s travel ban, which clamps down on entries from a handful of Muslim-majority countries, including Yemen.

The Yemenis in the lurch were told months earlier that their visas had been approved, but the immigratio­n documents had yet to be physically printed.

The families left Yemen, selling off everything they owned, to pick up visas supposedly waiting for them in Djibouti, an East African country on the other side of the Red Sea. They had to make the trek because American consular services in Yemen are “indefinite­ly suspended,” court papers said.

The American embassy in Djibouti is one of the places handling Yemeni applicatio­ns.

Consular officers told the people their applicatio­ns were now refused because of the ban, according to Cogan’s Tuesday ruling.

Cogan said he was merely making authoritie­s “undertake the printing of the visas which the approval notice said would occur.” The judge said if he didn’t step in, the people fleeing wartorn Yemen would “remain in their untenable position.”

Meanwhile, the waylaid visa recipients are in limbo. “Some are in camps, some are in one room,” attorney Julie Goldberg said of her clients.

Goldberg said she plans to beef up the suit with other examples of more Yemenis, as well as Iranians, stranded across the globe after visa approvals.

Cogan cautioned his ruling wasn’t a clear win for the Yemenis. Immigratio­n authoritie­s still had “broad authority to revoke visas” — it’s just that they can’t pull back the visas the way they did here, he said.

Government lawyers said Thursday they’ll be asking Cogan to rethink his order because officials haven’t finished their security checks for most of the applicants, they said.

Goldberg said her clients all cleared security checks.

A spokesman for the Brooklyn U.S. attorney declined to comment.

 ??  ?? Yemenis protest President’s immigratio­n policy at Brooklyn Borough Hall in February.
Yemenis protest President’s immigratio­n policy at Brooklyn Borough Hall in February.

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