President Trump signed a declaration on Wednesday banning travel and immigration from more than a dozen countries and restricting nationals in seven other countries, citing concerns about national security.
Mr. Trump's declaration completely bans foreigners from Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Sudan, Sudan and Yemen. Mr. Trump's order prohibits citizens seeking to come to the United States permanently with legal immigration and temporary visa holders, such as tourists.
The president also partially suspended travel and immigration from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela. Part of his declaration applies to all potential immigrants in these countries and comes with a visa to permanently settle in the United States and certain temporary visa holders.
The ban is scheduled to take effect at 12:01 a.m. on Monday, June 9.
Mr. Trump said concerns about terrorism-related terrorism were addressed, under-scrutiny of affected nationals and lack of cooperation in deportation between certain countries.
"President Trump is fulfilling his promise to protect Americans from dangerous foreign actors who want to come to our country and cause harm. These common sense restrictions are state-specific, including places where proper scrutiny is lacking, showing high visa downgrade rates, or failing to share identity and threatening information. President Trump will always act for the greatest interest of the American people to demonstrate the safety of Americans and their safety.
Mr. Trump’s statute contains certain exemptions, including assistance to permanent residents of the United States, Afghans and having special visas, diplomats, athletes and two-person nationals, and providing passports from countries he declared not listed.
The announcement of the ban is Attack in Boulder, Colorado on SundayHamas took the hostages as hostages in the face of the marchers attracting attention to the Israelites. The suspect was identified as an Egyptian national by U.S. officials, and he overdue his tourist visa.
Trump said in a video statement released by the White House on Wednesday night that the boulder attack “stresses the entry of foreign nationals who are not under censorship, and also highlights the extreme dangers our country has posed to our country, and those who come here as temporary tourists and visas with excessive visas. We don’t want them.”
He said if countries make major improvements, the list can be modified and new countries can be added as the threat emerges.
Mr. Trump's actions echo a series of travel bans issued initially primarily against the first governments of Muslim countries. Like these orders, his latest announcement could face lawsuits.
Mr. Trump in the first month of his first semester in January 2017 Signing a travel ban Restrict access to most citizens in Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. The move sparked widespread outcry, chaos at the airport and a legal challenge to argue that the ban was a discriminatory advocate.
In March 2017, Mr. Trump removed Iraq from the list and added Chad, Venezuela and North Korea. In 2020, he expanded the ban and increased immigration restrictions on Nigeria, Eritrea, Sudan, Tanzania, Myanmar and Kyrgyzstan. Chad was later removed from the list.
The third edition of Mr. Trump's first ban is Ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court In the summer of 2018, conservative judges restricted foreigners’ behavior on the grounds of national security by the president. The Biden administration lifted the ban after taking office.