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Somaliland pleads to be removed from Trump’s extreme vetting list

Somaliland pleads to be removed from Trump’s extreme vetting list
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By Stephen Dinan | The Washington Times | March 9, 2017  – Somaliland pleaded with the administration on Thursday to carve the territory out of President Trump’s new extreme vetting policy, but stopped short of agreeing to the kinds of changes that helped get Iraq off the target list.

The territory is a breakaway part of Somalia that has proclaimed its independence for more than two decades.

Saad Ali Shire, the territory’s minister of foreign affairs and international cooperation, said he was pleased with the revisions Mr. Trump made to allow legal permanent residents of the U.S. to enter without problems. That accommodation was not part of the original Jan. 27 executive order.

But Mr. Shire said he’ll use the 90-day pause in other visas that Mr. Trump imposed to argue Somaliland shouldn’t be part of the restrictions, which were placed on Somalia as well as Libya, Iran, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

“As Somaliland and the United States seek to advance shared security and economic interests, immigration policies directed at Somalia must not be applied to citizens of our country,” the minister said.

“During the upcoming 90-day review period established by the revised Executive Order, our government will clarify to U.S. officials its impact on our citizens and advocate for further measures that spare Somaliland from future directives,” he said. “In so doing, Somaliland will also reaffirm our desire for strengthened bilateral relations and official U.S. recognition of Somaliland’s independent sovereign status.”

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Photo by: Craig Ruttle
Halima Mohamed, embraces her daughter Muzamil Shalle, 14, not long after seeing her and her sister for the first time in seven years at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, Wednesday, March 8, 2017. The parents, who are from Somalia but have been living in Mechanicsburg, Pa., were originally scheduled to receive the children earlier this year, but the process was delayed due to a security check expiring as a result of delayed travel caused by the Jan. 27, 2017, White House travel ban executive order. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

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Xafiiska Wararka Qaranimo Online | Mogadishu, Somalia

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