The Oklahoman

Travel ban takes effect

- BY MATTHEW LEE AND ALICIA A. CALDWELL The Associated Press

A scaled-back version of President Donald Trump’s travel ban took effect Thursday evening, stripped of provisions that brought protests and chaos at airports worldwide in January yet still likely to generate a new round of court fights.

The new rules, the product of months of legal wrangling, aren’t so much an outright ban as a tightening of already-tough visa policies affecting citizens from six Muslimmajo­rity countries. Refugees are covered, too.

Administra­tion officials promised that implementa­tion this time, which started at 7 p.m., would be orderly. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Dan Hetlage said his agency expected “business as usual at our ports of entry,” with all valid visa holders still being able to travel.

Still, immigratio­n and refugee advocates are vowing challenge the new requiremen­ts and the administra­tion has struggled to explain how they will make the United States safer.

Under the temporary rules, citizens of Syria, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, Iran and Yemen who already have visas will be allowed into the United States. But people from those countries who want new visas will now have to prove a close family relationsh­ip or an existing relationsh­ip with an entity like a school or business in the U.S.

It’s unclear how significan­tly the new rules will affect travel. In most of the countries singled out, few people have the means for leisure travel. Those that do already face intensive screenings before being issued visas.

Neverthele­ss, human rights groups on Thursday girded for new legal battles. The American Civil Liberties Union, one of the groups challengin­g the ban, called the new criteria “extremely restrictiv­e,” “arbitrary” in their exclusions and designed to “disparage and condemn Muslims.”

The state of Hawaii filed an emergency motion Thursday asking a federal judge to clarify that the administra­tion cannot enforce the ban against fiancés or relatives — such as grandparen­ts, aunts or uncles — not included in the State Department’s definition of “bona fide” personal relationsh­ips.

Much of the confusion in January, when Trump’s first ban took effect, resulted from travelers with previously approved visas being kept off flights or barred entry on arrival in the United States. Immigratio­n officials were instructed Thursday not to block anyone with valid travel documents and otherwise eligible to visit the United States.

Karen Tumlin, legal director of the National Immigratio­n Law Center, said the rules “would slam the door shut on so many who have waited for months or years to be reunited with their families.

Trump, who made a tough approach to immigratio­n a cornerston­e of his election campaign, issued a ban on travelers from the six countries, plus Iraq, shortly after taking office in January. His order also blocked refugees from any country.

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