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Trump’s new travel restriction is effective as stress increases on immigration enforcement

Passengers took their luggage through the International Arrival area at Los Angeles International Airport at Los Angeles (Image Credit: AP)

The new ban by US President Donald Trump’s 12 mainly African and Central Eastern countries on the US visit to the US affected the increasing tension on the President’s growing operation on Monday. The new announcement, signed by Trump last week, applies to the citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Congo Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Irritriya, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. It also imposes increased restrictions on people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leon, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the US and do not have a legitimate visa. The new ban does not cancel the visa issued to people from countries in the list as per the guidance issued to all American diplomatic missions already. However, until an applicant fulfills narrow criteria for exemption for the ban, his application will be rejected from starting Monday. Passengers with earlier visas should still be able to enter the US even after the ban. During Trump’s first term, a hasty executive order ordered the citizens of Muslim countries to refuse to enter, which creates anarchy at many airports and other ports of entry, leading to major amendments for successful legal challenges and policy. There was no such disruption at the Los Angeles International Airport in hours after the new ban came into effect. Haitian-American Elvenis Louis-Zast, who was at the airport before Sunday in New Jersey, New Jersey, was waiting for the flight to his home state of Florida, said that many Hiyatians are willing to come to America, just trying to avoid violence and unrest. “My family has a family, so it is very upset to see and listen,” 23-year-old Luis-Jest said about the travel ban. “I don’t think it’s a good thing. I think it’s very upset.” Many immigration experts say that the new ban is more careful and designed to defeat the challenges of the court which disrupts first by focusing on the visa application process. Trump said this time that some countries had a “shortage” screening for passports and other public documents or historically refused to withdraw their own citizens. He trusted extensively on the annual homeland security report of people living in America After their visa ends. Measuring the overstay rates has challenged experts for decades, but the government has made a limited effort since 2016. Trump’s proclamation cites overstay rates for eight of the 12 banned countries. Trump also tied a new ban for a terrorist attack in Boulder, Colorado, stating that it outlines the dangers made by some visitors that were more than visa. US officials say that the accused in the attack abolished a tourist visa. He is from Egypt, a country that is not in Trump’s banned list. The ban was quickly condemned by groups that provide assistance and rehabilitation to refugees. AB Maxman, president of Oxfam, a non -profit international relief organization Oxfam, said, “This policy is not about national security – it is about sowing division and communities seeking security and opportunities in the United States.” Afghanistan’s inclusion angered some supporters who have worked to resume their people. The ban makes an exception to the Afghans on a particular immigrant visa, usually those who worked the most closely with the US government during a two -decade long war. Afghanistan was one of the largest sources of refugees, with about 14,000 arrival in a period of 12 months through September 2024.

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