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Home » News » World

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Bush visa plan draws copycat response

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Americans traveling to Europe may soon be required to go online at least 48 hours before they leave and obtain electronic entry visas, EU officials said.

They said the 27-country European Union is considering the new requirement in response to Bush administration plans to introduce electronic visas for all EU citizens seeking to visit the United States.

The European Union's intention has been conveyed to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff by Franco Frattini, vice president of the European Commission in Brussels, the officials said Monday. Mr. Frattini urged close U.S.-EU cooperation on developing the two systems, they said.

Mr. Chertoff's department decided several months ago to introduce the electronic visas under a program known as Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) to gather more information about passengers at least a day or two before their flights.

"We may consider the introduction of a similar reciprocal system on the EU level," said Telmo Baltazar, justice and home affairs counselor at the European Commission's delegation in Washington. "Close cooperation and consultation with the U.S. would therefore be very useful."

Mr. Chertoff says the reciprocity is "fair."

"We are perfectly content to have Europe impose the same basic approach," he told Germany's Der Spiegel magazine last month.

Americans and citizens of certain other countries, who at present can visit any EU member state with nothing more than a valid passport, would have to submit passport information and other personal data through the Internet to apply for an ETA.

The United States is moving quickly to implement its ETA program, and a reciprocal European program could be in place as early as next year.

EU officials have been vocal in their insistence that the U.S. visa-waiver program, which allows citizens of most Western European countries into the United States without a visa, be extended to all EU members, including former communist states in Central and Eastern Europe.

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