U.S. denied tens of thousands more visas
in 2018 due to travel ban: data
Source: Reuters
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[February 27, 2019]
By Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. State
Department refused more than 37,000 visa applications in 2018 due to the
Trump administration's travel ban, up from less than 1,000 the previous
year when the ban had not fully taken effect, according to agency data
released on Tuesday.
The United States denies nearly 4 million visa applications a year for a
variety of reasons, including for practicing polygamy, abducting
children or simply not qualifying for the visa in question. The data
released Tuesday was the first comprehensive look at the human impact of
Republican President Donald Trump's ban, imposed shortly after he took
office and initially blocked by federal courts.
The ban has especially affected people from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria
and Yemen, countries where the number of visas issued slid 80 percent in
2018 from 2016, the last year without a travel ban.
Trump's initial January 2017 executive order banning entry to the United
States by citizens of several Muslim-majority countries launched a
fierce fight in federal courts over whether the policy amounts to an
unlawful "Muslim ban" or is a legal exercise of presidential power.
The administration revised the policy following court challenges, and
the Supreme Court allowed it to largely go into effect in December 2017
while legal challenges continued. In June 2018, the high court upheld
the new version of the ban.
As a result, most people from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen have
not been able to enter the United States for well over a year. Venezuela
and North Korea also were targeted in the current policy, but those
restrictions were not challenged in court.
The figures released on Tuesday show the government denied 15,384
applications for immigrant visas - given to those who want to live
permanently in the United States - due to the "2017 Executive Order on
Immigration." A State Department spokeswoman confirmed that term
referred to the travel ban policy.
In addition, 21,645 applications for non-immigrant visas - given to
people coming for short-term visits for business, tourism or other
reasons - were denied due to the ban.
Approximately 2,200 visa applications overcame denials based on the
travel ban last year, but it was unclear how many of those applications
were initially made last year or earlier.
The data did not include how many visa applications were made by
citizens from countries affected by the travel ban.
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International travelers (reflected in a closed door) arrive on the
day that U.S. President Donald Trump's limited travel ban, approved
by the U.S. Supreme Court, goes into effect, at Logan Airport in
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., June 29, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Every month, the State Department releases the numbers of visas
issued to citizens of all countries, including those under the
travel ban, but it does not publish equivalent monthly information
on the number of visa applications or denials by country.
Other, previously released data from the State Department shows that
the number of U.S. visas issued to citizens of the countries under
the travel ban has dropped drastically as a result of its
implementation.
In the fiscal year from Oct. 1, 2017 through Sept. 30, 2018,
citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen - the five
countries consistently on the travel ban list throughout its
different iterations - received approximately 14,600 U.S. visas.
That is down 80 percent from approximately 72,000 visas issued for
citizens of those countries in the 2016 fiscal year, when no such
ban was in place.
The denials have affected people like Rasha Jarhum, a Yemeni human
rights defender who applied for a U.S. visitor visa in October to
attend events on women's rights.
The U.S. consular officer "refused to even take my passport to
process anything," Jarhum said. The officer handed her a piece of
paper citing the executive order as the reason for her visa denial,
a picture of which Jarhum posted on Twitter.
Ahmad Shariftabrizi, a U.S. citizen and oncologist in New York, is
considering leaving the United States if his wife, an Iranian
citizen, is unable to receive a visa to join him.
The couple, who wed in 2017, applied for her visa that year, and she
was denied in December 2018, he said in a phone interview. The U.S.
government is now reviewing whether she is eligible for a waiver to
the ban, which has been rarely granted.
The uncertainty and distance is extracting a huge emotional toll on
the couple.
"The separation from my wife is making both of us break down
psychologically," he said. "It's extremely difficult."
(Reporting by Yeganeh Torbati; editing by Mica Rosenberg and David
Gregorio)
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