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US Travel Ban 2020: What does the latest presidential proclamation mean?

By Matt Schulz and Mengci Shao
February 3, 2020
  • F-1
  • Immigration
  • Immigration Services
  • Visa
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Effective February 21, 2020, a proclamation issued by President Trump on January 31 imposes certain visa and travel restrictions on citizens from six countries not already listed in the President’s three previous travel ban proclamations.

The six countries with new travel restrictions are:

Burma Nigeria
Eritrea Sudan
Kyrgyzstan Tanzania

No Diversity Visa for Sudanese and Tanzanians

With respect to two of the above-listed countries—Sudan and Tanzania—the President only removed their passport holders’ eligibility to apply to immigrate to the US through the Diversity Visa Program (aka green card lottery). 

Immigrant visa restrictions

For the other four countries—Burma, Eritrea, Kyrgyzstan, and Nigeria—the President imposed travel restrictions on immigrant visas. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reports that the President’s proclamation applies only to intending immigrants abroad who have not yet received an immigrant visa.

Exceptions

DHS reports that the proclamation imposes no restrictions on nonimmigrant visas for citizens of any of these countries. B-2 tourists, F-1 students, H-1B workers and all other nonimmigrant visa holders are not banned from travel to the US.

DHS further reports that intending immigrants abroad who have a valid immigrant visa but have not yet entered the US may still do so and that lawful permanent residents already granted green card status are not impacted by the proclamation. 

It is unclear from the proclamation or DHS’s clarifying remarks how the proclamation will impact prospective immigrants already living in the US on nonimmigrant visas. Prior travel ban-related proclamations were later interpreted by DHS as not applying to foreign nationals who had already entered the US prior to said proclamation.

The full text of the proclamation can be viewed here. DHS’s travel and visa restrictions prepared remarks can be found at DHS website. 

For further information, please contact your Dentons lawyer.

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Department of Homeland Security, nonimmigrant visa, permanent resident, travel ban
Matt Schulz

About Matt Schulz

Matt Schulz is a member of Dentons' Litigation and Dispute Resolution practice with a focus on business immigration and employment law. He is a leader in the firm's Global Mobility practice and a member of Dentons' Venture Technology and Emerging Growth Companies practice.

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Mengci Shao

About Mengci Shao

Mengci Shao is a member of Dentons' Global Mobility practice and of the Employment and Labor practice. She practices immigration law with a focus on business immigration for corporate clients and businesses in the United States and worldwide. She helps employers plan and implement global transfers, secured appropriate work permits, provided pre- and post-transfer counseling to help ensure the proper drafting and execution of employment contract, and advised employers on staffing strategies, personnel policies, corporate compliance and best practices.

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