Yuma Sun

Trump replaces travel ban with new restrictio­ns on 8 nations

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WASHINGTON — Citizens of eight countries, including North Korea and Venezuela, will face new restrictio­ns on entry to the U.S. under a proclamati­on signed by President Donald Trump on Sunday that will replace his expiring travel ban.

The new rules, which will impact the citizens of Chad, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen, will go into effect on Oct. 18.

The restrictio­ns range from an indefinite ban on visas for citizens of countries like Syria to more targeted restrictio­ns. A suspension of non-immigrant visas to citizens for Venezuela, for instance, will apply only to certain government officials and their immediate families.

The announceme­nt comes the same day as Trump’s temporary ban on visitors from six Muslimmajo­rity countries was set to expire 90 days after it went into effect. That ban had barred citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen who lacked a “credible claim of a bona fide relationsh­ip with a person or entity in the United States” from entering the U.S. Only one of those countries, Sudan, will no longer be subject to travel restrictio­ns.

“Making America Safe is my number one priority. We will not admit those into our country we cannot safely vet,” Trump tweeted late Sunday after the new policy was announced.

Unlike the first iteration of Trump’s travel ban, which sparked chaos at airports across the country and a flurry of legal challenges after being hastily written with little input outside the White House, officials stressed they had been working for months on the new rules, in collaborat­ion with various agencies and in conversati­on with foreign government­s.

To limit confusion, valid visas would not be revoked as a result of the proclamati­on. The order also permits, but does not guarantee, case-by-case waivers for citizens of the affected countries who meet certain criteria.

That includes: having previously worked or studied in the U.S. for a lengthy and continuous period of time activity; having previously establishe­d “significan­t contacts” in the U.S.; and having “significan­t business or profession­al obligation­s” in the U.S. Still, officials acknowledg­ed the waiver restrictio­ns were narrower than the exemptions for people with bona fide ties to the United States that the Supreme Court mandated before the expiring order went into effect in late June.

The restrictio­ns are targeted at countries that the Department of Homeland Security says fail to share sufficient informatio­n with the U.S. or haven’t taken necessary security precaution­s.

DHS has spent recent months working to develop a new security baseline, which includes factors such as whether countries issue electronic passports with biometric informatio­n, report lost or stolen passports to INTERPOL, and share informatio­n about travelers’ terror-related and criminal histories. The U.S. then shared those benchmarks with every country in the world and gave them 50 days to comply.

A total of 16 countries did not comply with the rules at first, officials said, but half worked with the U.S. to improve their informatio­nsharing and security practices. The remaining eight are now subject to the new restrictio­ns until they make changes to bring them into compliance.

The new rules include the suspension of all immigrant visas for nationals of Chad, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Yemen and Somalia, and the suspension of nonimmigra­nt visas, such as for business and tourism, to nationals of Chad, Libya, North Korea, Syria and Yemen.

Citizens of Iran will not be eligible for tourism and business visas, but remain eligible for student and cultural exchange visas if they undergo additional scrutiny. Such additional scrutiny will also be required for Somali citizens applying for all non-immigrant visas.

Trump last week called for a “tougher” travel ban after a bomb partially exploded on a London subway.

Critics have accused Trump of oversteppi­ng his legal authority and violating the U.S. Constituti­on’s protection­s against religious bias each time he has ordered new travel restrictio­ns.

And the inclusion of Venezuela and North Korea appeared to be an attempt to block challenges from advocacy groups and others who have called the restrictio­ns a ban on Muslims.

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