Debut of US-VISIT
Last
week US immigration authorities began the US-VISIT program, which electronically
photographs and fingerprints foreign travelers at airports and seaports.
The program was introduced in 115 airports and at cruise ship terminals
at 14 seaports.
The
program is aimed at visitors who arrive in the United States on visas and is
designed to allow immigration authorities to quickly check if an arrival has a
criminal background, is on a terror watch list or is using a false name.
Information
obtained by immigration authorities will be securely stored and made available
only to authorized officials. The
start of the program comes more than two weeks after the Bush administration put
the nation on high alert for a terrorist attack.
Since then, several international flights from Britain, France and Mexico
have been canceled because of security concerns. The US-VISIT program has
already prompted Brazil to retaliate by imposing similar security measures on US
travelers.
The
program was first tested at the Atlanta airport late last year, and the trial
run turned up 21 people on the FBI’s criminal watch list for crimes such as
drug offense, rape and visa fraud, according to Homeland Security officials.
During the trials, the system added an average of about 15 seconds to
arrival processing, according to the government.
The
departure component of US-VISIT is supposed to take effect by the end of 2004.
Visitors leaving the country will be required to have their fingerprints
scanned at special kiosks. Arrival
and departure information would then be automatically reconciled.
The government expects to reduce the number of foreigners who overstay
their visas. Overstays account for
about a third of the estimated 10 million illegal immigrants in the US
US
citizens and green card holders will not be subject to US-VISIT, and neither
will people from 27 countries whose citizens are not required to have visas to
travel to the United States.
At the request of border-area groups, the government is considering a recommendation to exempt Mexican citizens who hold a US border-crossing card from US-VISIT. Holders of the card, who generally have strong work-related or family ties in the United States, account for about 30% of all land crossings.
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