The Citizen (Gauteng)

Now you must pay to enter US

$15 000VISA: FROM IRAN, DRC, SUDAN, MYANMAR

- Washington

Remains to be seen if Biden, who promises to welcome world, will maintain rule.

The United States will temporaril­y require visitors from Iran, Myanmar and a number of African nations to pay up to $15 000 (about R227 000) in visa bonds in a new hardline immigratio­n measure enacted late in Donald Trump’s presidency.

The rule takes effect 24 December for a duration of six months, although it remains to be seen if it will be maintained by president-elect Joe Biden, who takes office on 20 January and has promised to be more welcoming to the rest of the world.

The pilot programme is designed to make up the costs of deporting foreigners who overstay their visas, according to a notice published on Tuesday in the Federal Register by Carl Risch, the assistant secretary of state for consular affairs.

Visitors on “B” visas, which are issued for short-term business and tourism, will be asked to pay up to $15 000, which will be forfeited to the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency if they do not prove that they have left on time.

The rule will apply to citizens of 23 countries that, according to the declaratio­n, have overstay rates of more than 10%.

Most of the countries are in Africa, including Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Other nations on the list include Iran, Myanmar, Afghanista­n and Bhutan.

Trump has already sharply curtailed travel from Iran – part of his “Muslim ban” promised during his 2016 campaign, which Biden plans to rescind.

The bonds will not affect students or travellers from fellow developed countries who are exempt from visas to enter the US.

Contrary to the general practice for changes to immigratio­n rules, the Trump administra­tion launched the bonds abruptly without a period for public comment and review.

The state department official defended the streamline­d timeframe. “The pilot programme is being studied as a potential diplomatic tool to encourage foreign government­s to take all appropriat­e actions to ensure their nationals timely depart the United States after making temporary visits,” Risch’s fi ling said.

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