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US bars Syrian White Helmets cinematographer from attending Oscars

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Web Desk
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News Stories Posted by ARY News Digital Team

ISTANBUL: The United States has barred a Syrian cinematographer who worked on an Oscar-nominated documentary from entering the country to attend the Academy Awards ceremony.

Khaled Khatib, 21, was granted a US visa and was scheduled to depart from the Turkish city Istanbul on Saturday before US officials reportedly discovered “derogatory information” about him.

US Department of Homeland Security at the last minute blocked Khatib from traveling to Los Angeles, saying he now needed a new passport waiver.

Derogatory information is a broad term that includes a variety of allegations ranging from connections to attacks to passport irregularities.

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According to the Department of Homeland Security correspondence, Khatib was detained by Turkish authorities in Istanbul last week, which led to the US barring him.

“A valid travel document is required for travel to the United States,” Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Gillian Christensen told a foreign news agency.

It was unclear why he was arrested by Turkish authorities and his current whereabouts are unknown.

READ MORE: Syria’s White Helmets ‘proud’ after Oscar nomination

The incident took place less than a month after President Donald Trump’s now suspended temporary travel ban restricted entry of people from seven Muslim-majority countries including Syria.

Khatib, who documented Syria’s civil war in the film The White Helmets,
along with fellow rescue worker Raed al-Saleh were both granted visas earlier this month to attend the Oscars on Sunday.

In a Twitter post, Saleh said on Friday they would not be attending the event because they are busy helping people caught in the conflict.

The White Helmets is a 40-minute Netflix documentary nominated in the Oscars’ short documentary category.

It gives a glimpse in the daily lives of the group, also known as Syria Civil Defence, whose members volunteer as emergency rescue workers in Syria.

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Among the film’s harrowing scenes are images of people digging through demolished homes searching for potential survivors after air strikes or artillery barrages.

The volunteers are at risk of being killed in “double tap” attacks that target first-responders arriving at the scene and many have died. The group was also nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize last year.

The United Nations estimates nearly 400,000 people have been killed and more than half the population has been forced to flee the country, since the start of the Syrian in March 2011.

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