RIYADH,
October 7 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Saudi Arabia is expected
to start finger-printing Americans entering the kingdom in response to
a similar measure introduced by the United States last week, the U.S.
embassy said Sunday, October 6.
“The
embassy wishes to advise American citizens that in the near future the
government of Saudi Arabia may start requiring American citizens to be
fingerprinted as part of their visa or entry process,” the embassy
said in a new warden message, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
“There
also is the possibility that the duration of visas to Saudi Arabia
will be shortened for American citizens and visa fees increased,”
the message added.
Despite
being contacted several times by IslamOnline, the U.S. embassy in
Riyadh refused to comment on the statement. An official working at the
embassy said they needed approval from Washington before talking to
the press.
New
stringent U.S. immigration checks on nationals from several Muslim
countries went into effect last Tuesday.
The
measures, which require Saudi male visitors to the United States to
undergo digital fingerprinting and photographing, and to provide
information on travel plans, has angered Saudis who decried it as
discrimination.
Under
these rules, male visitors from the countries concerned, aged between
16 and 45, are required to register with the authorities upon entering
the United States.
Such
visitors are also required to appear for an interview at immigration
offices if they wish to stay in the United States for more than 30
days. They must notify the authorities within 10 days of any change to
their place of residence.
The
U.S. embassy said the expected Saudi measures are in “response to
the introduction ... of the National Security Entry Exit Registration
System (NSEERS).”
There
are between 30,000 and 40,000 Americans living and working in the
oil-rich kingdom, down from about 60,000 a decade ago.
Since
September 11, 2001, the U.S. embassy in Saudi Arabia has stiffened
procedures for issuing visas to Saudi citizens, including students.
It
has abolished a system by which Saudis could submit visa applications
through certain travel agencies and required that almost all
applicants appear for personal interviews.
The
embassy also required Saudi women, normally veiled in public, to
submit applications with photos showing their faces. Saudi men were
asked to submit pictures without the traditional head cover.
Last
month, the national oil giant Saudi Aramco was forced to send some 100
students to Europe after the U.S. embassy refused to grant them visas.
The
number of Saudi travelers to the United States has sharply dropped
following the plane bombings in New York and Washington in which 15 of
the 19 hijack suspects are Saudi.
The
countries whose citizens are subject to the extra U.S. checks are:
Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Indonesia,
Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Morocco, Oman,
Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, the
United Arab Emirates and Yemen.