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Thursday 10 September 2020

US revokes more than 1,000 visas of Chinese nationals

Pedestrians walk through the gates of Harvard Yard at Harvard University on Aug 13, 2019. Chinese students enrolled at US universities received notice that their visas have been cancelled. (AP pic)

WASHINGTON: The US has revoked more than 1,000 visas of Chinese nationals as of this week, a State Department spokeswoman said on Wednesday, as part of the Trump administration’s push to block entry of students and researchers from China it believes have links to the Chinese military.

In a May 29 proclamation, President Donald Trump restricted the entry of certain Chinese students and researchers to the US, saying they were being used in Beijing’s campaign to acquire sensitive US technologies and intellectual property.

The State Department began implementing the rules effective June 1.

“As of Sept 8, 2020, the Department has revoked more than 1,000 visas of PRC nationals who were found to be subject to Presidential Proclamation 10043 and therefore ineligible for a visa,” a department spokesman said in emailed comments to Reuters.

The department has broad authority to revoke visas, she said and exercises that authority when information comes to light time indicating that a visa holder may be inadmissible to the US or otherwise ineligible for a visa.

She did not share specific details of whose visas had been revoked.

Earlier on Wednesday, dozens of Chinese students enrolled in US universities said they received emailed notices from the US Embassy in Beijing or US consulates in China informing them their visas had been cancelled.

Some 360,000 Chinese nationals who attend US schools generate annual economic activity of about US$14 billion, largely from tuition and other fees.

US officials have said the visa actions affect a small portion of those students.

“We continue to welcome legitimate students and scholars from China who do not further the Chinese Communist Party’s goals of military dominance,” the spokesman said.



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