The Trump administration on Wednesday signed an announcement for citizens of 12 countries, suspending the US visit to the US: Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Irritriya, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
Citing national security interests, proclamation stated that in identified countries, there is a lack of adequate veting and screening processes required to detect foreign nationals that can face the dangers of security or terrorism to America
Proclamation is also partially banned entrance to citizens of seven other countries: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.
Other views include information-sharing policies of a country, presence of terrorists, visa overstay rates and what citizens sent back are easily accepted.
The ban is ready to be effective on ET at 12:01 pm on Monday.
One in Video Released by the White House on Wednesday night, Trump said on his first day in the office, he directed the State Secretary to review the “high -risk areas” to make the travel ban recommendations.
They also quoted Sunday attack on Jewish protesters Boulder in the video, in Colorado. The person alleged in the attack is Mohammad Sabri Soliman, Egyptian national. Egypt is not named in the new travel ban.
The policy reflects a uniform travel ban announced in January 2017 in a week in the first term of Trump, which banned travel from seven Muslim-bound countries. The policy, while large -scale was criticized, was eventually retained by the Supreme Court in 2018.
The ban was later abolished by the President Joe Biden in 2021.
Democratic MPs have opposed the latest ban on social media. They include Sen Adam Shif, D-Calif, and Sen Ed Marks, D-Mas, who posted on X: “Don’t make any mistake: Trump’s latest travel ban will not make America safe. We cannot allow the Trump administration to write bigotry and hatred in American immigration policy.”
The new policy applies to foreigners from nominated countries who are outside the United States and lack of visa to enter on Monday, June 9.
Some passengers are distinguished by the rule, describing that American permanent residents, athletes traveling to participate in major sports programs, and immediately quoted family members as an example with “obvious and solid evidence of family relations”.