
The US Government has reversed its decision and issed a US Visa to a Colombian journalist.
28 July 2010
The US State Department has reversed its decision to deny a visa to a leading Colombian journalist to take up a prestigious fellowship position.

The US Government has reversed its decision and issed a US Visa to a Colombian journalist.
Journalist Hollman Morris and his family picked up their visas at the US Embassy on Tuesday. Morris and his family can now travel to the US where Morris will attend Harvard for the year-long Nieman Foundation fellowship.
Last month, the 41-year-old Morris was told he was ruled permanently ineligible for a US Visa under the terrorist activities clause of the USA Patriot Act.
Journalists, lawmakers and many human rights organizations, lobbied strongly for a reversal on the decision, calling the visa denial an attack on free speech.
Morris has reported on ties between illegal far-right militias and allies of outgoing President Álvaro Uribe, Washington's closest ally in Latin America.
He is one of 12 foreign journalists admitted to the prestigious Nieman Foundation Fellowship program for the 2010-2011 academic year.
The American Visa Bureau is an independent consulting company specialising in helping people make US Visa applications to the US Embassy.
News
American visa authorities struggle with new discretionary powers - 07 Feb 12
Alabama’s tough American immigration laws feel backlash - 07 Feb 12
Romney adds US immigration hardliner to California campaign team - 07 Feb 12
Kansas businesses propose surprising US immigration plan - 06 Feb 12
17 asylum seekers bound for the US drown as boat capsizes - 06 Feb 12
More news