Trump travel ban: Who counts as a 'bona fide' relative?

Reuters A family hug each other at Washington Dulles Airport on 26 June, 2017, after the U.S. Supreme Court granted parts of the Trump administration's emergency request to put its travel ban into effectReuters
The temporary travel ban had stopped those affected from visiting relatives in the US

President Donald Trump's temporary travel ban sparked a debate about who should count as a close relative.

Under the rules, the US may refuse entry to refugees unless they can prove a "bona fide relationship" with a person, business or university in the US.

The same terms apply to people with passports from Iran, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

Initially, the state department said that the only people who counted as "close family" were parents (including in-laws and step-parents), spouses, fiancé(e)s, children (including sons and daughters-in-law), siblings and half-siblings.

But others didn't make the grade - among them grandparents and grandchildren, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Weeks later, a court in Hawaii ruled that the state department's rules defied "common sense".

"Common sense, for instance, dictates that close family members be defined to include grandparents," District Judge Derrick Watson wrote.

"Indeed, grandparents are the epitome of close family members."

Grandparents, not terrorists

In June, as the travel ban came into effect, the Trump administration's definition of "close family" prompted strong emotions online.

Many social media users insisted their loved ones should be on the "bona fide" list, and posted pictures of their grandparents under the Twitter hashtag #grandparentsnotterrorists.

Some addressed the US president directly, asking: "Is this the face of terror?"

@yasminradjy Yasmin Radjy tweets a photo of her grandmother with the caption: "Revised #travelban will #keepamericasafe from my 97yo #Iranian grandma &her radical belief that all meals need a glass of sherry &a cigarette".@yasminradjy
@hdagres Holly Dagres tweets a photo of her grandmother with the caption: "#GrandparentsNotTerrorists No to the #MuslimBan".@hdagres
Twitter/ekhatami Elham Khatami tweeted a picture of herself smiling with her grandmother, saying: "This is my lovely grandma. @realDonaldTrump does she look like a terrorist to you?"Twitter/ekhatami
@mo0nbeam Mahsa Payesteh tweets a photo of her as a child on her grandfather's back with the caption: "Hey @realDonaldTrump, does my grandpa look dangerous to you? #GrandparentsNotTerrorists".@mo0nbeam
@MsJamshidi Maryam Jamshidi tweets a photo of her grandmother with the caption: "Say hello to my 87-year-old Iranian grandmother, who is now banned from coming to the United States #MuslimBan".@MsJamshidi
Twitter/MariaAfsharian Twitter user Maria Afsharian shared a picture of her grandmother with the words, "Does my Iranian grandmother on the left look dangerous to you? Supreme Court action re #MuslimBan is ridiculous."Twitter/MariaAfsharian
@AlaHeshemi Ala Hashemi-Haeri tweets a photo of his grandmother with the caption: "Is this the face of terror? #grandparentsnotterrorists".@AlaHeshemi
Twitter/CamiliaRazavi Camilia Razavi shared a picture of herself kissing her beaming grandmother, writing: "Hugging my grandma extra tight tonight."Twitter/CamiliaRazavi
@shayanmodarres Shayan Modarres Esq. tweets a photo of his grandmother with the caption: "This is my grandmother. This is who @realDonaldTrump and @marcorubio are keeping out of the United States #GrandparentsNotTerrorists".@shayanmodarres

One user from Houston, Texas tweeted: "I have #Bonafide relationship W/my #GrandparentsNotTerrorists. Thank God my family's been in #US longer than @realDonaldTrump #POTUS family!"

Michael R Ulrich, a professor at the Center for Health Law, Ethics & Human Rights, shared a picture of a little girl, writing: "I know you're my niece, but no more presents for you Olivia, our relationship is not #bonafide."

Lawyers and human rights groups warned that the controversial travel ban - and its tricky terms - would prompt a "summer of litigation" as desperate refugees and would-be travellers tried to prove their claims were really "bona fide".

The Hawaii ruling may solve a problem for many family members but individuals still need to prove their connection to the US to enter for work or educational reasons.

And while the issue around "close family" may now be resolved - for now at least - many took issue with the government even attempting to define it in the first place.

Syrian-American Rama Issa, the executive director of the Arab-American Association of New York, told news website Quartz in June that the Trump administration was "redefining what a family is".

She had planned to marry in the autumn, and wants her beloved cousins, aunts, and uncles - who live abroad - to be there. She told the site she had postponed her wedding, after struggling with "the idea that a government can tell me who the members of my family should be".

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Naureen Shah, Amnesty International USA's senior director of campaigns, said the initial guidance was "simply heartless," and showed "a cruel indifference to families, some already torn apart by war and horrifying levels of violence".

She also called it a poor way to label families, noting: "It defines close family relationships in a way that ignores the reality in many cultures, where grandparents, cousins and in-laws are often extremely close."