US visas to Muslim-majority countries down 20%

US non-immigrant visas issued to people from all countries was about 15 per cent lower in April


Reuters May 26, 2017
An international traveler arrives after US President Donald Trump's executive order travel ban at Logan Airport in Boston, Massachusetts, US. PHOTO: REUTERS

The United States issued about 50 per cent fewer visitor visas in April 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.

The total number of US non-immigrant visas issued to
people from all countries was about 15 per cent lower in April
compared with the 2016 monthly average. The April data shows the continuation of a trend identified in data for the month of March, which the State Department released last month.

That data showed that citizens of the seven Muslim-majority countries under the bans - Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen - received about 40 per cent fewer visitor visas in March than in an average month last year. Trump's travel bans have been blocked by the courts.

India to 'slow' down visa process for Pakistani nationals

Citizens of the seven countries received about 2,800 non-immigrant visas in April 2017, compared with 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. Data from previous years is only available in aggregate by fiscal year, rather than month-by-month.

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 agency did not release data on the number of visa applications, so it is unclear whether the lower number of visas is because of a higher rate of rejections or other factors, such as fewer applicants or slower processing times.

"Visa demand is cyclical, not uniform throughout the year,
and affected by various factors at the local and international
level," said William Cocks, a spokesman for the State
Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs.

Executive Orders

Trump, who has said the travel bans were intended to make
Americans safer from attacks, signed an executive order on January
27 barring people from the seven countries from entering the
US for 90 days. After the order was blocked by federal courts, the Trump administration replaced it with a revised, narrower ban which dropped Iraq from the list.

These countries offer visa-free entry to Pakistanis

Courts have also halted parts of the second order. On Thursday, a US appeals court refused to reinstate the travel ban, calling it discriminatory and setting the stage for a showdown in the Supreme Court.

Although visitor visas were down across the board for the
seven targeted countries compared with last years' averages,
Iraqis in April received 349 immigrant visas, which are
typically given to those with jobs or family members in the
US, compared with 305 in an average month in 2016.

Syrians also received more immigrant visas in April - 268
versus an average of 219 per month last year. All other
countries targeted by one of Trump's bans received fewer
immigrant visas in April than in an average month last year.

COMMENTS (2)

Robert | 6 years ago | Reply Just 80 more percent to go.
Bunny Rabbit | 6 years ago | Reply and can you really really blame Uncle Sam for this ?
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