Trump replaces travel ban with new restrictions

WASHINGTON (AP) — Citizens of more than half a dozen countries will  face new restrictions on entry to the U.S. under a proclamation signed  by President Donald Trump on Sunday that will replace his expiring  travel ban.

The new rules, which will impact the citizens of Chad, Iran, Libya,  North Korea, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen — and some from Venezuela — will  go into effect on October 18.

The restrictions range from an indefinite ban on visas for citizens  of countries like Syria to more targeted restrictions. A suspension of  non-immigrant visas to citizens for Venezuela, for instance, will apply  only to certain government officials and their immediate families.

The announcement comes the same day as Trump’s temporary ban on  visitors from six Muslim-majority countries was set to expire 90 days  after it went into effect. That ban had barred citizens of Iran, Libya,  Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen who lacked a “credible claim of a bona  fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States” from  entering the U.S. Only one of those countries, Sudan, will no longer be  subject to travel restrictions.

“Making America Safe is my number one priority. We will not admit those into our country we cannot safely vet,” Trump tweeted late Sunday after the new policy was announced.

Unlike the first iteration of Trump’s travel ban, which sparked chaos  at airports across the country and a flurry of legal challenges after  being hastily written with little input outside the White House,  officials stressed they had been working for months on the new rules, in  collaboration with various agencies and in conversation with foreign  governments.

To limit confusion, valid visas would not be revoked as a result of  the proclamation. The order also permits, but does not guarantee,  case-by-case waivers for citizens of the affected countries who meet  certain criteria.

That includes: having previously worked or studied in the U.S.;  having previously established “significant contacts” in the U.S.; and  having “significant business or professional obligations” in the U.S.  Still, officials acknowledged the waiver restrictions were narrower than  the exemptions for people with bona fide ties to the United States that  the Supreme Court mandated before the expiring order went into effect  in late June.

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