Trump reportedly imposes $15,000 visa bond for visitors from Nigeria and other countries
A new temporary rule that could require tourist and business travellers from a dozen African countries, including Nigeria, to pay a bond from $5,000 to $15,000 to visit the United States, will take effect from 24 December.
Other
countries whose tourist and business travellers could be subject to the
bond requirement are those from Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia,
Sudan, Chad, Angola, Burundi, Djibouti and Eritrea.
Afghanistan, Bhutan, Iran, Syria, Laos and Yemen are also listed.
Nigerian
travellers will have to pay the bond as some categories of visitors
overshot the threshold of 10 percent and above overstaying rate.
Overall, out of 177,835 Nigerians who visited the US in 2019, the overstaying rate was between 9.45-9.88 percent.
A total of 17,566 overstayed. Out of the figure, 764 departed late and 16,802 stayed in the country.
But in other classifications, 11.12 percent of 9,336 Nigerian non-immigrant and exchange visitors overstayed.
Another 13.67 percent of in-scope nonimmigrant visitors also overstayed same year.
The
U.S. State Department said the temporary final rule, which takes effect
Dec. 24 and runs through June 24, targets countries whose nationals
have higher rates of overstaying B-2 visas for tourists and B-1 visas
for business travellers.
The Trump administration said the
six-month pilot program aims to test the feasibility of collecting such
bonds and will serve as a diplomatic deterrence to overstaying the
visas.
Trump, who lost a re-election bid earlier this month, made
restricting immigration a central part of his four-year term in office.
President-elect
Joe Biden, a Democrat, has pledged to reverse many of the Republican
president’s immigration policies, but untangling hundreds of changes
could take months or years.
Biden’s transition team did not
immediately respond to a request for comment related to the visa bond
requirement, Reuters reported.
The visa bond rule will allow U.S.
consular officers to require tourist and business travellers from
countries whose nationals had an “overstay rate” of 10% or higher in
2019 to pay a refundable bond of $5,000, $10,000 or $15,000.
Twenty-four countries meet that criteria, including 15 African countries.
While those nations had higher rates of overstays, they sent relatively few travellers to the United States.
Historically,
U.S. consular officers have been discouraged from requiring travellers
to the United States to post a bond, with State Department guidance
saying processing of the bonds would be “cumbersome,” the temporary rule
said.
A Department of Homeland Security (DHS) report on that
fiscal year shows the worst offenders were typically from Chad (44.94
percent), Djibouti (37.91 percent), and Mauritania (30.49 percent). In
fact, 15 of the 24 countries above 10 percent are in Africa.
But the list also includes Iran at 21.64 percent and Afghanistan at 11.99 percent, as well as Bhutan and Laos.
The
DHS report counted more than 422,000 instances of overstays in fiscal
year 2019 by business and tourism visitors, including those who came
through the Visa Waiver Program and those who did not.
The
planned pilot period into June is an effort to discourage overstays and
to test a system for collecting the de facto deposits on leaving.
News later hard it that the United States mission in Nigeria says Nigeria is not included in the visa bond pilot programme.
In a statement, the U.S. mission said that the limited six-month visa bond pilot programme, beginning Dec. 24, 2020, affected 15 African countries, excluding Nigeria.
The 15 African countries affected are Angola, Liberia, Libya, Burkina Faso, Congo, Djibouti, Burundi, Eritrea, Mauritania, Gambia, Susan, Chad, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Principe, and Cape Verde.
The visa bond programme will require applicants for tourist and business visas from the African countries to pay up to a $15,000 bond (country dependent) in addition to visa fees.
The U.S. mission said that the new rule was put in place to address the high rate of Non-immigrant overstay following visa expiration and/or completion of purpose in the U.S.
from pmnewsnigeria
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