Travelers
to the United States will soon have to submit their social media
identities, previous telephone numbers and email addresses, a measure
that could touch 10 million people per year.
According
to a State Department plan published Friday, visa seekers -- whether
visitors or would-be immigrants -- will be presented with a list of
social media platforms.
Applicants
will be required to identify which they use and provide "any
identifiers used by applicants for those platforms during the five years
preceding the date of application."
"Other
questions seek five years of previously used telephone numbers, email
addresses, and international travel," the notice, published in the
Federal Register, revealed.
When
these new rules were first suggested last year as part of what US
President Donald Trump has called "extreme vetting" of would-be
visitors, civil liberties groups sounded the alarm about privacy.
But
officials say they could identify potential extremists, such as one of
the attackers in the December 2015 San Bernadino shooting -- who got a
visa despite allegedly advocating "jihad" on social media.
The
measures apply both to the DS-260 "Immigrant Visa and Alien Registration
Form" and the DS-160 "Application for Nonimmigrant Visa."
In the
last fiscal year, 559,536 people applied for US immigrant visas and
9,681,913 for various forms of visitor visa. Friday's announced measures
will not touch diplomatic or official travelers.
The
announcement begins a 60-day period in which interested bodies and
members of the public will be allowed to submit comments on the rule
changes, which are expected to be approved on May 29.
AFP
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