
The New York Times has published new details about a red list in the process of announcing it by the Trump administration and includes 11 countries whose citizens will be fully prevented from entering the United States, including “Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Syria.”
She pointed out that the restrictions will be strict on the citizens of those countries, including Russia.
The proposed list mainly contains the names of the countries that were mentioned in Trump’s first prevention, namely Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen.
The new draft is suggested, although it is careful to add the name of Afghanistan to the countries that will prevent their citizens from entering America, according to one of the officials.
Recommendations include a “orange” group of countries that will be limited to the entry of their children but will never prevent the entry of the United States. Within this category, only the wealthy who want to conduct transactions and trade in the United States will be limited to, but not for immigrants or tourists. The period of visas and the request for applicants can also be shortened.
Trump’s policy of preventing the entry of certain countries to the entry of certain countries is due to his electoral pledge in December 2015, with “a full and comprehensive ban for Muslims to enter the United States so that our country representatives can know what is happening.”