VS breidt $15.000-visumborgstellingsprogramma uit

The Trump administration has announced a significant expansion of its visa bond program, adding twelve new countries to the existing list of nations whose citizens must pay a $15,000 security deposit when applying for U.S. business or tourism visas. The policy change, confirmed by a State Department official on Wednesday, will take effect April 2nd.

The newly added countries include Cambodia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Grenada, Lesotho, Mauritius, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Papua New Guinea, Seychelles, and Tunisia. These nations join 38 previously designated countries, primarily across Africa, bringing the total to 50 countries subject to the financial requirement for B1/B2 visa applications.

According to an anonymous official, the program aims to reduce visa overstays by creating a substantial financial incentive for compliance. Travelers who adhere to their visa conditions and depart the United States on schedule will receive their full deposit refund. The administration claims the bond system has already contributed to a measurable decrease in visa violations since its implementation.

This expansion represents the latest development in President Trump’s stringent immigration agenda, which has included enhanced deportations, visa revocations, social media screenings, and the controversial travel ban affecting citizens from 19 predominantly Muslim-majority countries implemented in June 2017.

While human rights organizations have criticized these measures as restrictive to due process and potentially discriminatory, administration officials maintain they are essential for national security. The visa bond program specifically targets nations with historically high rates of visa overstays, seeking to improve compliance while reducing immigration enforcement costs.

The complete list of previously designated countries includes Algeria, Bangladesh, Cuba, Nigeria, and Venezuela, among others. The program’s expansion continues the administration’s pattern of implementing increasingly rigorous immigration controls since President Trump took office in January 2017.