Thursday, December 10, 2015

VWP Change

From the BBC:
"US House votes to restrict visa-free travel after Paris attacks"
 
The House of Representatives has voted to tighten visa-free travel to the US following the Paris attacks. The measures would bar people who travelled to Iraq and Syria after March 2011 from the visa waiver programme. People who have visited Iran and Sudan - which the US accuses of supporting terrorism - would also need a visa. The White House-backed bill was proposed because the Paris attackers could have travelled to the US without a visa. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has called for far greater restrictions, proposing that all Muslims be barred from entering the US until further notice. The House voted 407 to 19 in support of the proposed change to visa-free travel. "In an abundance of caution, we will now require those individuals to apply for a visa and go through the formal visa screening process," said House Republican Candice Miller, the bill's main sponsor. There are 38 nations currently included in the US Visa Waiver Program (VWP). US officials say about 5,000 Europeans, including many from VWP nations, have travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight with extremist groups such as the so-called Islamic State and pose a risk to the US. If the bill passes through the Senate and is signed into law, it would also require all travellers arriving in the US under the VWP to have electronic passports containing biometric data from next April. The bill also calls for countries participating in the VWP to share more information about suspected terrorists and criminals.
 

^ I am all for restricting ordinary people who have travelled to Sudan, Iraq, Syria or Iran but we shouldn't restrict those who went to Iraq or Syria as part of their government's (ie France, England, Germany, etc) fight against either Saddam or IS. They should still be allowed to travel to the US without a visa as long as they can prove they were on the right side of the fight there. I am curious to see of the EU will follow the US' example and restrict the same people. I hope if they do then they also have an exemption for American (or any other nationality) soldiers who went to Iraq or Syria to fight the terrorists (not for them.) My dad and others have been to Iraq over the years and it wouldn't be right to make them get a visa when they were helping to keep us safe. ^


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-35047716

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