The publication notes that this would be extremely difficult to implement, as the party has 92 million members.
The administration of US President Donald Trump is considering banning Chinese Communist Party members and their families from entering the United States. This was reported on Wednesday in its electronic version by the American newspaper The New York Times, citing four sources.
According to them, the administration is also studying proposals to cancel U.S. visas for CPC members and their family members who are in the U.S., as well as to restrict entry into the country for Chinese People’s Liberation Army soldiers and managers of Chinese state enterprises. According to the newspaper, it will be extremely difficult to implement such proposals, given that the CPC has 92 million members. In 2018, almost 3 million Chinese citizens entered the U.S., the U.S. authorities do not know the location of most guests from China.
According to the publication, the proposals are included in President Trump’s draft decree. This document is justified by the Immigration and Nationality Act and is not yet complete.
On Wednesday, State Secretary Michael Pompeo informed about the imposition of unilateral sanctions against some employees of Chinese technology companies involved, according to the conclusions of the American authorities, in the violation of human rights. According to Pompeo’s statement, according to the Immigration and Nationality Act, the arrival of a foreigner in the United States is inadmissible if the authorities have reason to believe that his or her entry into the country “could potentially have serious adverse foreign policy consequences” for Washington.
In early July, the State Department, the U.S. Treasury, Commerce and Homeland Security Departments issued a joint statement warning of the risks to companies whose supply chains are linked to businesses in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region due to human rights abuses attributed to them.