The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Less chaos expected as new travel ban takes effect

- By Matthew Lee and Alicia A. Caldwell Associated Press

WASHINGTON » A scaled-back version of President Donald Trump’s travel ban takes 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 Muslim-majority countries. Refugees are covered, too.

Administra­tion officials predicted that implementa­tion, beginning at 8 p.m. EDT (0000 GMT), would be orderly. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Dan Hetlage said his agency expected “business as usual at our ports of entry.”

Yet amid vows from immigratio­n and refugee advocates to challenge the new requiremen­ts, the administra­tion sometimes struggled to explain how the new requiremen­ts would make the United States safer.

Under the temporary rules, citizens from Syria, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, Iran and Yemen who already have visas will be allowed into the United States. But people from those countries who need 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 to what degree the new rules will affect travel. Few people in most of the countries have the means for leisure travel, and those that do already face intensive screenings before being issued visas.

Still, 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.”

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. That ban also blocked refugees from any country. Trump said these were temporary measures needed to prevent terrorism until vetting procedures could be reviewed. Opponents noted that visa and refugee vetting were already strict and said there was no evidence that refugees or citizens of those six countries posed a threat. They saw the ban as part of Trump’s campaign promise to bar Muslims from entering the United States.

Lower courts blocked the initial order and, later, a revised Trump order intended to overcome legal hurdles. The Supreme Court on Monday partially reinstated the revised ban but exempted travelers who could prove a “bona fide relationsh­ip” with a U.S. person or entity. The court offered only broad guidelines.

In guidance issued late Wednesday, the State Department said the personal relationsh­ips would include a parent, spouse, son, daughter, son-in-law, daughter-inlaw or sibling already in the United States. It does not include other relationsh­ips such as grandparen­ts, grandchild­ren, aunts and uncles.

Business or profession­al links must be “formal, documented and formed in the ordinary course rather than for the purpose of evading” the ban. Journalist­s, students, workers or lecturers who have valid invitation­s or employment contracts in the U.S. would be exempt from the ban. The exemption does not apply to those who seek a relationsh­ip with an American business or educationa­l institutio­n purely for the purpose of avoiding the rules.

Refugees from any country will face similar requiremen­ts, under the new rules. But the U.S. has almost filled its quota of 50,000 refugees for the budget year ending in September and the new rules won’t apply to the few remaining refugees. They could apply for the next batch of refugees for the next budget year, but with the Supreme Court set to consider the overall ban in October, those rules could change again.

The travel ban may have the largest impact on Iranians. In 2015, the most recently available data, nearly 26,000 Iranians were allowed into the United States on visitor or tourist visas. Iranian’s made up the lion’s share of the roughly 65,000 foreigners from the six countries who visited with temporary, or non-immigrant visas that year.

American journalist Paul Gottinger, said he and his fiance Mahsa Abbasi Mivehkar, an Iranian, applied for the visa nearly a year ago but are still waiting on a decision. Gottinger says the couple was due to wed at a Japanese garden in his parents’ home state of Minnesota this month but postponed until August because they had not yet received the visa.

Now, he expects they will have to delay again.

“Every twist and turn of the courts, we’re holding our hearts and our stomachs are falling to the floor,” he said by phone from Turkey.

The new regulation­s may also affect the wedding plans of Rama Issa-Ibrahim, executive director of the Arab American Associatio­n of New York,.

She is Syrian-American and had planned to get married this fall. While her father in Syria may be able to get a visa, her aunts and uncles may well be blocked.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Travelers make their way up the arrival ramp at the Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at the Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport Thursday, June 29, 2017, in Los Angeles.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Travelers make their way up the arrival ramp at the Tom Bradley Internatio­nal Terminal at the Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport Thursday, June 29, 2017, in Los Angeles.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sudanese activist Tayeb Ibrahim, who had worked to expose Sudanese abuses in the volatile South Kordofan province and hopes to see family living in the U.S. state of Iowa, watches television with his son Mohammed, in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, June 28,...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sudanese activist Tayeb Ibrahim, who had worked to expose Sudanese abuses in the volatile South Kordofan province and hopes to see family living in the U.S. state of Iowa, watches television with his son Mohammed, in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, June 28,...
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this June 16, 2017 photo, Khaled Almilaji and his wife Jehan Mouhsen speak to a reporter after reuniting at Pearson Internatio­nal Airport near Toronto.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this June 16, 2017 photo, Khaled Almilaji and his wife Jehan Mouhsen speak to a reporter after reuniting at Pearson Internatio­nal Airport near Toronto.

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