The US won’t give visas to same-sex partners of UN officials anymore

Rainbow flags outside the White House, June 2017.

The change applies to foreign diplomats and other employees at international organizations in the US.

The Trump administration has started denying diplomatic visas to same-sex partners of foreign diplomats and officials who work atinternational organizations in the United States, such as the United Nations.

Those partners who are currently in the US will be forced to marry by the end of the year, change their visa status, or leave the country.

The Trump administration’s decision, which went into effect on Monday, reverses a policy that then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton put into place in 2009, which made visas available to same-sex partners of foreign diplomats or UN officials. This did not apply to heterosexual unmarried couples.

During a briefing on Tuesday, a State Department official framed the new rules as bringing the visa policy in line with the 2015 Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage, and “to promote the equal treatment of all family members and couples.”

But some lawmakers and former diplomats have already criticized the policy change, which was first circulated in a letter in July. Samantha Power, a former ambassador to the United Nations, called the policy “needlessly cruel and bigoted” in a tweet last week.

What does this policy change mean?

A State Department official said at the briefing Tuesday that this policy change will affect about 105 families, with about 55 of those working for international organizations like the UN.

But those employees at the UN and other international organizations will likely feel the brunt of this policy change. The State Department has said it will work with and possibly make exceptions for foreign diplomats who are from countries where same-sex marriage isn’t legal, but whose countries recognize the same-sex spouses of US diplomats. diplomats, possibly making exceptions for those individuals.

But this doesn’t apply to UN employees or other US-based international organization officials. They’ll have to be legally married, with no exceptions.

Alfonso Nam, the president of UN Globe, an LGBT advocacy group for UN employees, said that this change couldput same-sex couples at risk.

Even if couples can get legally married in a country that recognizes same-sex unions, they have to be confident that the country won’t share that information, or make it widely known, as it could open up those individuals to face criminal charges or discrimination in their home countries.

Though the State Department says it wants to promote equal treatment, Nam said heterosexual couples don’t face the same have restrictions on where they can get married. They “have “They have comfort of knowing no matter what, what that this marriage will be recognized around the world,” Nam he world,” he said. “Same-sex couples have limited options.”

The US won’t give visas to same-sex partners of UN officials anymore
By Jen Kirby

October 2, 2018 at 03:00PM
via Vox – All https://www.vox.com/2018/10/2/17928958/united-nations-same-sex-partners-visas