Twitter
Advertisement

US may hike H1-B visa quota for Indians by 25%

The US on Friday said it has a proposal to raise the H1-B, short duration stay, visa quota for Indians by 25 per cent.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

NEW DELHI: The US on Friday said it has a proposal to raise the H1-B, short duration stay, visa quota for Indians by 25 per cent.

It is also taking steps to reduce the waiting period for visa applications, particularly students, of this country.

It also denied that religion was any criteria for issuance or denial of visa to anybody.

Efforts are underway to raise the quota for H1-B visas for Indians and there is a proposal to hike it by 25 per cent, Peter G Kaestner, newly-appointed Minister for Consular Affairs at the US Embassy said.

At present, the limit of such visas meant for those employed temporarily is 80,000.

The issue is political in nature and US Congress has to decide on it finally, the official said. Kaestner said he felt the number would remain inadequate even after the hike.The US H1-B visa is a non-immigrant visa, which allows a US company to employ a foreign individual for up to six years.

The H1-B visa-seekers could be those employed temporarily in a speciality occupation or as a fashion model of distinguished merit and ability.

The US Embassy is making efforts to reduce the waiting period for visa seekers, particularly students and cut down on the backlog.

To reduce the backlog, the staff at the Embassy are being increased and a new consular section is being opened, Kaestner said.

He said the US would soon set up a Consulate in Hyderabad with the External Affairs Ministry giving in-principle approval to move to a building in the Andhra capital.

During the first 10 months of the US fiscal year which starts in October, issuance of visas has gone up by 11.5 percent.

Refusal rate across India has dropped over the last five years, the US official said. He said, however, that some applicants were faking as students to gain entry into his country and Washington was trying to curb this activity.

 

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement