The Star Malaysia

US to shorten Chinese visas

Measure is to prevent intellectu­al property theft in high-tech sectors

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NASHVILLE: The US government plans to shorten the length of visas issued to some Chinese citizens as part of a strategy to prevent intellectu­al property theft by US rivals, a White House official said.

The US State Department will implement measures from June 11 to “enhance security for some Chinese visa applicants”, the official said on Tuesday.

The change would come as President Donald Trump’s administra­tion attempts to crack down on what it says is theft of US intellectu­al property by China.

“Going forward, a reduction in validity of some newly issued visas is part of the National Security Strategy to ensure intellectu­al property is not transferre­d to our competitor­s,” the official said, referring to a document that was issued by the Trump administra­tion in December.

The document said officials would consider restrictio­ns on visas for science and technology students from some countries to ensure “intellectu­al property is not transferre­d to our competitor­s”.

A State Department official said the visa applicatio­n process had not changed but that consular officers may limit the validity of visas for some Chinese applicants on a caseby-case basis.

The Associated Press, which first reported the new policy, quoted a US official as saying Chinese graduate students would be limited to one-year visas if they are studying in certain fields, such as robotics, aviation and high-tech manufactur­ing.

Those are areas Beijing has said are high-priority goals for its manufactur­ing sector.

According to AP, the official said the instructio­ns also stated that Chinese citizens seeking visas would need special clearance from multiple US agencies if they work as researcher­s or managers for companies on a US Commerce Department list of entities needing higher scrutiny.

Those clearances are expected to take months for each applicatio­n, AP cited the official as saying.

Earlier on Tuesday, Washington said it was still considerin­g slapping 25% tariffs on US$50bil (RM200bil) worth of Chinese goods in retaliatio­n for what the Trump administra­tion says are China’s unfair trade practices. — Reuters

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