WASHINGTON — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem recommended this week that the administration impose a full travel ban on countries she described as "flooding" the United States with criminals and welfare seekers, after a Nov. 26 shooting that wounded two National Guard members. Officials moved to pause adjudication of immigration, green card and citizenship cases from 19 countries while vetting is reviewed, citing national security concerns, and the administration signalled adding more nations, possibly exceeding 30, to the travel-restriction list. The measures follow a June proclamation and internal USCIS guidance dated Dec. 2. Based on 11 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
U.S. federal security and immigration enforcement agencies gained expanded authority to pause and re-examine immigration and naturalization cases, allowing them to implement stricter vetting protocols and slow processing from specified countries.
Citizens and applicants from the targeted countries, refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants experienced halted applications, increased uncertainty, delayed legal status processing, and restricted mobility due to paused adjudications and expanded travel restrictions.
U.S. halts immigration applications from 19 travel-ban countries: U.S. media
english.news.cnU.S. Expands Travel Restrictions Following Guard Shooting Call
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