US reportedly approves social media background checks for visa applicants
The U.S. is buttressing its paperwork walls with new
requirements for social media disclosures as part of revised visa applications.
Reported
by Reuters earlier
today, the decision from the U.S. government’s Office of Management and Budget
was made over strenuous objections from education and academic groups during a
public comment period.
The new
questionnaire will ask for social media handles dating back over the last five
years and biographical information dating back 15 years.
For critics,
the new questionnaire represents yet another obstacle that the government is
putting in the path of potential immigrants, would-be students and qualified
researchers and teachers that may otherwise want to come to the United States.
Check out the
new visa questionnaire here.
Quoting an
unnamed State Department official, Reuters reported that the additional
information would only be requested when the department determines that “such
information is required to confirm identity or conduct more rigorous national
security vetting.”
In an earlier
Reuters report, the news service quoted an immigration attorney railing against
the new procedures:
“What this language
effectively does is give the consular posts permission to step away from the
focused factors they have spent years developing and revising, and instead
broaden the search to large groups based on gross factors such as nationality
and religion,” Gairson said.
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