Number of U.S. visas to citizens of Trump
travel ban nations drops
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[April 28, 2017]
By Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States
issued about 40 percent fewer temporary visas in March to citizens of
seven countries covered by President Donald Trump's temporary travel
bans than it did in an average month last year, according to a Reuters
analysis of preliminary government data released on Thursday.
At the same time, the data showed that the total of U.S. non-immigrant
visas issued to people from all countries was up by nearly 5 percent in
March compared to the 2016 monthly average.
Citizens of the seven Muslim-majority nations under the bans - Iran,
Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen - received about 3,200
non-immigrant visas in March 2017, compared to about 5,700 on average
per month during the 2016 fiscal year and more than 6,000 on average per
month in 2015 and 2014. Trump's travel bans were later blocked by the
courts.
The State Department released the data to comply with a directive from
Trump asking it to publish monthly breakdowns of the number of visas
issued around the world.
The department did not release data on the total number of all types of
visa applications, so it is unclear whether the lower number of
temporary visas for citizens of the seven countries is because of a
higher rate of rejections or other factors, such as fewer applicants or
slower processing times.
A State Department official noted that "visa demand is cyclical, not
uniform throughout the year, and affected by various factors at the
local and international level. Visa issuance numbers tend to increase
during peak travel seasons, such as during the summer and the winter
holidays."
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
March is neither a busy nor slow time for temporary visa issuances to
people from the seven countries, several immigration lawyers said.
Therefore, the significant drops are notable, they said.
The data is preliminary and numbers could be subject to minor revision,
the State Department said.
Previously, such data was only available in aggregate by fiscal year,
and the department declined to break out March visa data from previous
years.
Nevertheless, some immigration attorneys said the numbers released on
Thursday provide a glimpse into how Trump's policies are affecting visa
decisions.
"Either there are many fewer people applying because they believe they
will be denied, or a much higher rate of denials is already happening
even though the executive orders have been blocked," said William Stock,
president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.
EXECUTIVE ORDERS
Trump, who has said the travel bans were intended to make Americans
safer from attacks by terrorists, signed an executive order on Jan. 27
barring people from the seven countries from entering the United States
for 90 days.
The order was blocked by federal courts and the Trump administration
replaced it with a revised, narrower travel ban effective March 16 which
dropped Iraq from the list. Courts have also halted parts of the second
order.
The number of non-immigrant visas issued to Iranians dropped to 1,572 in
March from 2,450 per month on average in 2016 according to the data.
Iraqis received 684 such visas in March, compared to nearly twice that
number per month on average in 2016, the data showed.
[to top of second column] |
Demonstrators protest against President Donald Trump's revised
travel ban outside the offices of the U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., March 16, 2017.
REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski
Iranians also received fewer immigrant visas, which are granted to
family members of U.S. citizens or those with jobs in the United
States, than the average in previous years - 393 received immigrant
visas in March, compared to 644 on average per month in 2016 and
nearly 600 on average per month in 2015 and 2014.
Although visitor visas were down across the board for the seven
targeted countries, two of them saw the number of immigrant visas
issued tick up slightly. Forty-one Libyans received immigrant visas
in March, compared to 32 per month on average in 2016. Somalians
received 171 visas in March compared to 150 on average in 2016.
Immigration lawyers said that although the travel bans have been
halted by courts for now, the administration's vow to put stricter
controls on immigration is likely to have changed how U.S.
consulates evaluate visa applicants.
Stephen Pattison, a former State Department consular official now
working as an immigration attorney, said consulates "are going to
probably err more on the side of denying some people that they'd be
on the fence about."
Anecdotally, several U.S.-based lawyers with Iranian clients say
their visa applications are taking longer to process and are being
rejected more often since Trump took office on Jan. 20.
They cite shortages of interview appointments for Iranians,
interviews canceled at the last minute and longer "administrative
processing" periods than they are accustomed to.
"If you can't get an interview, you can't get a visa," said Babak
Yousefzadeh, a San Francisco-based attorney and member of the board
of directors of the Iranian American Bar Association.
Some Iranians have decided that for now, it is not worth it to risk
the expense and time of making U.S. visa applications, said
Kiyanoush Razaghi, a Maryland-based immigration attorney.
In addition to paying a standard $160 visa application fee, Iranians
must typically travel to Turkey, Armenia or the United Arab Emirates
for their interviews, since there is no U.S. diplomatic presence in
Iran.
"That's a fundamental change that I am seeing, at least in the
community and among the clients that I have," Razaghi said. "They
have a general feeling that now is not a good time to apply for a
visa."
Graphic: U.S. temporary visas issued to people in countries under
Trump travel ban - http://tmsnrt.rs/2qd2ekN
(Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg and Julia Edwards Ainsley;
Editing by Sue Horton and Grant McCool)
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