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US fingerprints ‘allied‘ visitors

Spr.Earl

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US fingerprints ‘allied‘ visitors


Millions of fingerprints are being checked each year
A US requirement for visitors to be fingerprinted and photographed is being expanded to include citizens from America‘s closest allies.
The move will affect visitors from 27 countries - including the UK, Japan and Australia - whose nationals are able to visit the US without a visa.

The change in the US-Visit programme is due to take effect by 30 September.

The programme is designed to fight terrorism, but has been criticised by many - notably in Latin America.


Secure passports

The US-Visit (US Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology) security system is meant to identify travellers who have violated immigration controls, have criminal records or belong to groups listed as terrorist organisations by the US.

The US has been routinely fingerprinting and face-scanning foreign visitors since January.

But Washington decided to extend the programme after determining that visa waiver countries will not meet an October deadline to introduce sophisticated passports, which include biometric data and make counterfeiting virtually impossible.

COUNTRIES AFFECTED
Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK
The UK authorities, for example, have said they will not be able to issue the new passports with the new data - such as an individual‘s fingerprints or iris pattern - before mid-2005.

The administration announced on Friday that it would seek a two-year extension of the deadline from Congress.

Security officials said the delay of the new passport system meant the port-of-entry security checks would therefore have to be extended.

Citizens from the 27 countries will still be allowed to visit the US without a visa, although they will now have to be fingerprinted and photographed before they enter.

"We recognise that the visa waiver country travellers are among our best allies, friends, and international guests," said Asa Hutchinson, undersecretary for border and transportation security.

"We are doing all we can to make sure the security measures cause minimal inconvenience."

‘Privacy protected‘

The plans, if approved by Congress, will entail a massive increase in the visitors to the US requiring checks. Some 13 million visitors from visa waiver countries visit the US each year, compared to some 19 million from non-visa waiver countries.

Canadians will now be the only foreign nationals able to enter the US without the checks, Mr Hutchinson said.

Asked whether the data on visitors would be kept, Mr Hutchinson said it would - in part to "facilitate travel" for frequent visitors to the US.

He said fingerprints were checked against criminal databases, but the information was "strictly protected under privacy rules".

When the border procedures for non-visa waiver countries were introduced at the beginning of the year, Brazil protested by introducing similar checks for US visitors to Rio de Janeiro.

But the US authorities the news measuers do not add any significant time to the process of clearing immigration.

And the BBC‘s Washington correspondent Justin Webb points out that there may be some benefits.

Some people who were going to have to get visas will be allowed to continue using the scheme.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3595221.stm

George Orwell must be rolling over in his grave.
 
Canadians exempted from expanded U.S. fingerprinting plan
Last Updated Fri, 02 Apr 2004 18:02:09

WASHINGTON - Border guards at U.S. airports and seaports will fingerprint and photograph visitors from some of Washington‘s closest allies, beginning this year.

The Department of Homeland Security said on Friday it was expanding a program called US-VISIT. Introduced in January, it requires people from a large number of countries to have their pictures and fingerprints taken when they arrive in the U.S. by airplane or boat.

As of Sept. 30, visitors arriving from 27 more countries, including Britain, Spain and Japan, will have to do the same.

Canada and Mexico are not yet affected by the new rules.

COUNTRIES AFFECTED

"¢ Andorra
"¢ Australia
"¢ Austria
"¢ Belgium
"¢ Brunei
"¢ Denmark
"¢ Finland
"¢ France
"¢ Germany
"¢ Iceland
"¢ Ireland
"¢ Italy
"¢ Japan
"¢ Liechtenstein
"¢ Luxembourg
"¢ Monaco
"¢ Netherlands
"¢ New Zealand
"¢ Norway
"¢ Portugal
"¢ San Marino
"¢ Singapore
"¢ Slovenia
"¢ Spain
"¢ Sweden
"¢ Switzerland
"¢ United Kingdom


All the countries affected are on the "visa-waiver" list, meaning citizens from those countries can visit the United States for up to 90 days without a visa.

About 13 million people from those countries visit the United States each year.

Their visa requirements won‘t change, so they won‘t have to submit to the lengthy process of consulate interviews and background checks required of visitors from countries not on the list.

Canadians only need visas to enter the United States to work or attend school. The Department of Homeland Security made the changes because most countries on the visa-waiver list won‘t meet an October 2004 deadline for developing passports that include biometric information.

Since January, five million visitors have been fingerprinted and photographed at the border. The U.S. government says more than 200 persons with prior or suspected criminal or immigration violations have been caught because of it.

The rules have caused resentment in other countries, however. Brazil has responded by requiring U.S. citizens to be fingerprinted and photographed before they can enter that country.
 
Yea... your probably right CFL. Maybe Canada should start doing something similar.
 
I wonder how this will affect NAFTA and people who are transfered from place to place because of work?
 
Now Now ....ultra Canadian Nationalists

I wonder if the shoe was on the other foot, would you say the same?
S_Baker, what are you referring to here?
 
Why the heck would they skip canada with this? Canada is probably thee worst offender for security issues.
 
I think it has to do with the fact tht Canada is not part of the visa waiver program. The authority for us to enter the US without a Visa actually comes from a seperate law or something.
 
I wonder if the US government pays people to sit in a room with no windows and paper and a pencil until they come up with a clever enough acronym?

USA Patriot Act, US Visit... heh
 
If you want to apply for any of the programs that allow Canadians to cross "I think its called NEXUS" the border quicker or go through the airport quicker you must allow yourself to be fingerprinted and have you photo taken by the US customs.
 
S_Baker,

I see, you were getting a jump start before the bashing. Although, I think you jumped the gun a bit, no one was giving you any grief at all. It‘s all too easy for both sides to get our backs up.

So I prefaced my remarks to avoid any incoming rounds......did it work?
I guess time will tell ;)

Personally, I think Canada should be included in the new security measures unless we are doing the same. I‘m sure we‘ll never know the full extent of all the politicking going on behind closed doors but I think it would be wise to do the same. As well as the benefits to lessening the possibility of terrorists crossing the US/Canadian border, we don‘t want them in our country either!
 
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