The US State Department says it is adding 12 more countries to the growing list of countries whose citizens must post bonds of up to USD 15,000 to apply for a US visa. Effective April 2, passport holders of Cambodia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Grenada, Lesotho, Mauritius, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Papua New Guinea, Seychelles and Tunisia will have to submit this bond. This bond is returned if the visa application is rejected, or if the visa is granted, provided the person adheres to the conditions of the visa. This information is according to a notice issued on the website of the State Department on Wednesday. After April 2, there will be 50 countries on whose citizens this condition will apply. This condition was imposed by the Trump administration last year, when it cracked down on overstayers and took steps to stop large-scale illegal migration. Today’s other big news… Pakistan and Afghanistan announced a temporary pause in attacks on each other A day after the Afghan government accused Islamabad of killing 400 people in an attack on a rehabilitation hospital in Kabul, Pakistan and Afghanistan on Wednesday announced a temporary pause in fighting in view of Eid-ul-Fitr and at the request of Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar. Pakistan’s Information Minister Ataullah Tardar made this announcement in a post on ‘X’. The announcement came hours after his country launched new attacks on alleged Taliban targets in the border area. He said, in view of the upcoming Islamic festival of Eid-ul-Fitr, on its own initiative as well as at the request of ‘brotherly Islamic countries’ like Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, Pakistan has decided to announce a temporary halt amid the ongoing ‘Operation Ghazab-lil-Haq’.
Source link
[ad_3]
Daily Latest News