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Visa FAQs
Immigration law requires consular officers to view every visa
applicant as an intending immigrant.
The United States is an open society. Unlike many other countries,
the United States does not impose internal controls on most visitors,
such as registration with local authorities. In order to enjoy the
privilege of unencumbered travel in the United States, aliens have
a responsibility to prove they are going to return abroad before
a visitor or student visa is issued.
The immigration law requires consular officers to view every visa
applicant as an intending immigrant until the applicant proves
otherwise. To qualify for a visitor or student visa, an applicant
must meet the requirements of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Failure to do so will result in a refusal of a visa.
The most frequent basis for a visa refusal.
The most frequent basis for such a refusal concerns the requirement
that the prospective visitor or student possess a residence abroad
he/she has no intention of abandoning. Applicants prove the existence
of such residence by demonstrating that they have ties abroad that
would compel them to leave the U.S. at the end of the temporary
stay. The law places this burden of proof on the applicant.
Strong ties.
Strong ties differ from country to country, city to city, individual
to individual. Some examples of ties can be a job, a house, a family,
a bank account. "Ties" are the various aspects of your
life that bind you to your country of residence: your possessions,
employment, social and family relationships. Consular officers are
aware of this diversity. During the visa interview they look at
each visa application individually and consider professional, social,
cultural and other factors. In cases of younger applicants who may
not have had an opportunity to form many ties, consular officers
may look at the applicants specific intentions, family situations,
and long-range plans and prospects within his or her country of
residence. Each case is examined individually and is accorded every
consideration under the law.
Visa denial is not permanent.
The consular officer will reconsider a case if an applicant can
show further convincing evidence of ties outside the United States.
Your friend, relative or student should contact the embassy or consulate
to find out about reapplication procedures. Unfortunately, some
applicants will not qualify for a nonimmigrant visa, regardless
of how many times they reapply, until their personal, professional,
and financial circumstances change considerably.
Immigration law delegates the responsibility for issuance or refusal
of visas to consular officers overseas. They have the final say
on all visa cases. By regulation the U.S. Department of State has
authority to review consular decisions, but this authority is limited
to the interpretation of law, as contrasted to determinations of
facts. The question at issue in such denials, whether an applicant
possesses the required residence abroad, is a factual one. Therefore,
it falls exclusively within the authority of consular officers at
our Foreign Service posts to resolve. An applicant can influence
the post to change a prior visa denial only through the presentation
of new convincing evidence of strong ties.
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