The
Trump administration put new requirements in place on Friday for the 38
countries participating in the U.S. Visa Waiver Programme, including that they
use U.S. counterterrorism data to screen travelers, officials said.
The programme allows citizens of mainly
European countries to travel to the U.S. for up to 90 days without a visa.
Citizens from the 38 countries are required
to obtain a so-called travel authorisation to enter the U.S.
President Donald Trump
has sought to tighten the rules for those seeking to visit or live in the U.S.
in several ways, saying restrictions are necessary for security reasons.
The changes will apply to all countries in the programme.
One change is that they will be required to use U.S. information to screen
travelers crossing their borders from third countries.
Many countries in the programme already do that, one
administration official said.
Countries whose citizens stay longer than authorised during visits to the U.S. at a relatively higher rate will be required to conduct public awareness campaigns on the consequences of overstays, the officials said.
Countries whose citizens stay longer than authorised during visits to the U.S. at a relatively higher rate will be required to conduct public awareness campaigns on the consequences of overstays, the officials said.
One existing penalty is that people, who overstay a visit
may not travel visa-free to the U.S. in the future.
The threshold for the overstay rate triggering the public
information campaign requirement is two per cent, the officials said.
In the 2016 fiscal year, of the VWP countries, Greece,
Hungary, Portugal, and San Marino, a wealthy enclave landlocked inside central
Italy, had total overstay rates higher than two per cent, according to a report
by the Department of Homeland Security.
The overall overstay rate for VWP countries is 0.68 per
cent, lower than non-VWP countries excluding Canada and Mexico, which is at
2.07 per cent, according to the DHS report.
Members of Congress have expressed concern about the
security risks of overstays.
A May 2017 report by the
DHS inspector general found the department lacked a comprehensive system to
gather information on departing visitors, forcing it to rely on third-party
data to confirm departures, which is sometimes faulty.
The U.S. will also start assessing VWP countries on their
safeguards against “insider threats” at their airports, especially those with
direct flights to the U.S., officials said.
The goal is to ensure countries “make sure that airport
employees, aviation workers et cetera, aren’t corrupted or are co-opted to pose
a threat to aircraft, especially those that are U.S.-bound,” an official said.
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