President Biden's executive buy ends Trump's Muslim travelling ban

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President Biden's executive buy ends Trump's Muslim travelling ban
Among the flurry of executive orders signed by President Joe Biden on Wednesday was one ending the ban on travelers from several majority-Muslim countries, which was first of all issued by Donald Trump in January 2017.

"Beyond contravening our values, these Executive Orders and Proclamations contain undermined our national security," Biden's executive buy rescinding the ban reads. "They possess jeopardized our global network of alliances and partnerships and so are a moral blight which has dulled the energy of our example around the world. And they have separated family members, inflicting pain that will ripple for a long time to arrive. They are just plain wrong."

Rather than a ban, the White House says it'll enhance the screening of visitors by strengthening data sharing with foreign governments and other measures.

The so-called Muslim ban went through multiple iterations before it was finally upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018. The original ban affected refugees from Syria, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

But the set of countries changed during the period of a protracted court battle that wound all the way to the Supreme Court. As the high courtroom allowed the buy to take result in December 2017, the legal fight didn't end until the following June. At that time, the list consisted of five majority-Muslim countries - Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen  - and two that aren't: North Korea and Venezuela.

Previous January, the Trump administration added six different countries - Nigeria, Myanmar, Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, Sudan and Tanzania - to its set of restricted countries.

Within 120 times, Biden said he wanted his secretary of state and Homeland Security director to supply an assessment of current vetting procedures and information-sharing along with suggestions for revising them.

Biden's picks to lead the STATE DEPT. and Homeland Security, Tony Blinken and Alejandro Mayorkas, respectively, are going through the Senate confirmation method.

Biden as well ordered that the State Department resume digesting visa applications and that within 45 days and nights, the secretary of condition give him with a report outlining the quantity of visa applicants being viewed as for a waiver when the Trump order was signed; programs for "expeditiously adjudicating" their pending visa applications; the reconsideration of these whose applications had been denied; and ways to ensure that situations of these who reapply are not prejudiced therefore of a prior visa denial.

"Make no blunder, where there are threats to our Nation, we will address them," Biden's order stated. "Where there happen to be possibilities to strengthen information-posting with companions, we will go after them. So when visa applicants request entry to america, we will apply a rigorous, individualized vetting system. But we will not convert our backs on our ideals with discriminatory bans on access in to the United States."

Source: bangladeshmonitor.com.bd
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