Island nation Tuvalu seeks US assurance its citizens won't be barred from entering after US 'error'
An internal diplomatic cable signed by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio showed the US, which had already barred entry for citizens from 12 countries, was reportedly considering expanding travel restrictions to another 36 countries, including three Pacific Island states.
Nations on the list would have 60 days to take corrective action, the cable showed.
The news had caused significant concern for the 11,000 residents on the island of Tuvalu, which scientists predict will be submerged by rising sea levels.
Tuvalu's ambassador to the United Nations, Tapugao Falefou, said he was told by a US official that Tuvalu's inclusion on the list was "an administrative and systemic error on the part of the US Department of State".
In a statement, Tuvalu's government said it had not received any formal notification that it was on the list, and was assured by the US embassy in Fiji it was "an error within the system".
"The embassy has provided verbal assurances that there are no current restrictions on Tuvaluan nationals entering the United States, and that the matter is being reviewed with authorities in Washington," the statement from Tuvalu's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Labour and Trade said.
It added that Tuvalu was seeking a "formal written confirmation to that effect and continues to engage the US government to ensure Tuvaluans are not unfairly affected".
The embassy did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
A US official familiar with visa policy who was not authorised to speak publicly told Reuters that "no decisions have been made, and any speculation is premature".
"Tuvalu's public statement mischaracterises and omits some of the valid concerns the United States has with travellers from that country," the official added.
The other Pacific Islands listed in the cable were Vanuatu and Tonga.
Henrietta McNeill, a Pacific security and geopolitics researcher at the Australian National University said it "made sense" if Tuvalu's inclusion on the list of 36 countries facing visa bans was a mistake.
She said unlike Tonga and Vanuatu, Tuvaluans respectively, did not have a history of overstaying visas or have in place a citizenship by investment scheme, aspects which the US was clamping down on.
"If anything, the integrity of their nationals is very clear given the Falepili Union and the fact that Australia wants Tuvaluans to migrate to Australia."
Both Australia and New Zealand have established permanent migration pathways for Tuvaluans through an annual ballot system.
Around a third of the island's residents have already applied to migrate under the Falepili Union, which Australia entered with Tuvalu last year.
The scheme will grant 280 Tuvaluans a permanent visa to Australia each year, while New Zealand's scheme, which began in 2001, allowed 75.
In practice, Dr McNeill said the removal of Tuvalu on the US's list of countries with visa bans would unlikely benefit the lives of Tuvaluans much as there are no migration partnership in place.
However, the relaxing of travel and migration restrictions could bolster US diplomacy in the Pacific, particularly against China's influence in the region.
"The US doesn't always know how to engage in the Pacific Island region."
"Migration is a significant part of soft power and we're definitely seeing that through Australia's use of the Falepili scheme .
"I think that this [visa removal] will have an effect on diplomatic relations with the US."
ABC with Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


SBS Australia
3 hours ago
- SBS Australia
Trump 'keen' to meet Albanese, Wong says, after talks with US top diplomat
United States President Donald Trump is still "keen" to meet with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese although the precise time of a rescheduled get-together is still up in the air, Foreign Minister Penny Wong has said. "I had a really good meeting with Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, and he expressed regret for the [Trump-Albanese] meeting having to be rescheduled," Wong told Sky News Australia on Thursday. When asked about the time and whereabouts of a rescheduled meeting, Wong said the Australian government was "very flexible about those arrangements". "The president is a very, very busy man. But I was pleased that Secretary Rubio made clear that they're keen for a meeting, [and] they want to reschedule it. "It was disappointing as he said that they had to reschedule because the president had to return, as a consequence of what was occurring in the Middle East." At that time, one of Albanese's spokespeople described the postponement as "understandable" considering escalating conflict between Israel and Iran — a conflict that the US would enter five days later, bombing three Iranian nuclear facilities. 'Quite rational' to review AUKUS The two leaders were anticipated to meet and discuss several topics, including US steel and aluminium tariffs on Australian products and the AUKUS deal, which is currently under review by the US. Some of these issues were discussed during a meeting between Wong and Rubio in Washington, where she attended a Quad meeting with other members of the diplomatic partnership: the US, India and Japan. "We had a lot to talk about ... We live in a region, as Secretary Rubio said, that is being reshaped and the future of the 21st century will be defined by that reshaping," Wong said. She said that it is "quite rational" for a new administration in the US to review AUKUS. "This is a multi-decade task [and] governments, foreign ministers, defence ministers ... of all colours will have to deliver this and we're gonna have to work together," she said. After the talks, in a joint statement, the four countries' foreign ministers said they were launching the Quad Critical Minerals Initiative. They called the initiative an "ambitious expansion of our partnership to strengthen economic security and collective resilience by collaborating to secure and diversify critical minerals supply chains". "We do recognise this [critical minerals] is a strategic asset to Australia but also to our partners," Wong said. In response to a question about whether these minerals can play a role in tariff talks with the US, Wong said: "We see the strategic benefit in critical minerals ... We have more work to do on how that might work with the United States. "They are interested and we are interested."

ABC News
4 hours ago
- ABC News
Australian National University announces more job cuts as it seeks to save $250 million
The Australian National University (ANU) is planning to cut another 59 jobs in its bid to save $250 million by 2026. The additional job losses come on top of the 41 proposed job cuts announced last month. The positions are across academic and professional roles from within the College of Science and Medicine, the College of Arts and Social Sciences, and the Research and Innovation Portfolio. The staff now have three weeks to provide their response and feedback to what the university intends to do. Vice-Chancellor Genevieve Bell said that while the job losses were necessary, the proposal was not set in stone and planned staff cuts could be changed. "Last year, for instance, we had multiple change plans and in each one of those instances, the number of staff that was impacted changed and it became a smaller number in those plans," she said. Professor Bell also acknowledged that the impact of the cuts was unclear, but that the broad offering of courses would continue. "It's not yet clear what the impact will be on courses, but the reality is we have programs that we are committed to and we'll continue to deliver those," she said. "It's really important that we maintain a really strong research portfolio and a really strong transformative educational experience." The union representing staff at the ANU says the cuts are eroding the academic stature and reputation of the university. In a statement, Dr Lachlan Clohesy, National Tertiary Education Union ACT division secretary, said the ANU shouldn't be proposing more job cuts. "These job losses lay at the feet of the vice-chancellor," he said. This latest round of cuts to reduce staff and money is part of a broader savings plan the ANU says is necessary to ensure the long-term future of the institution. "In October of last year, we agreed with [the ANU] Council that we needed to take $250 million out of the recurring operating base of the university," Professor Bell said. "Which was a big shift for the university but was the amount we needed so that we were no longer spending more than we were earning." The key aim for the ANU is to break even financially for 2026, and the total savings planned include $100 million less in staff salaries. "We are making strides along that journey for the $100 million we needed to take out of the salary of the university," Professor Bell said. In a statement, the ANU added that "it is anticipated that no organisational change proposals will be released beyond 31 October, 2025 for the 2025 year". But the university said it was unknown at this stage whether further changes or cuts would be required in 2026. The latest proposed savings come just weeks after Federal Education Minister Jason Clare raised "significant concerns" about the ANU with the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency. A "live compliance process" — a review into the concerns raised at the ANU — is ongoing.

ABC News
a day ago
- ABC News
Labor luminaries join calls for the Treasurer to amend proposed tax changes on $3m super balances
Political correspondent Brett Worthington talks to Kirsten Aiken about the growing pressure on Treasurer Jim Chalmers to change his proposed reforms to the way big superannuation balances are taxed.