
New Travel Ban Prompts Fear and Frustration for U.S. Immigrants
An Afghan tech worker in California now faces a prolonged separation from his wife, who he had hoped would soon join him in America. A Somali American filmmaker in Minnesota has become afraid to do what he is legally able to, travel abroad. A refugee from Afghanistan in Idaho worries that she will be stereotyped as a terrorist in her adopted home.
President Trump signed an order on Wednesday barring citizens of a dozen countries, primarily in Africa and the Middle East, from traveling to the United States. Immigrants from those countries said they were not surprised by the president's move — on the campaign trail, he had promised repeatedly to revive the contested travel bans from his first term — but nonetheless described being hurt and confounded.
'I don't understand why the president has to target us nonstop,' said Frantzdy Jerome, a Haitian asylum seeker with a work permit who works the overnight shift at an Amazon warehouse in Ohio.
There was widespread fear and confusion in immigrant communities across the nation, in big cities with bustling African and Middle Eastern enclaves, and in small towns where clusters of refugees and immigrants were gaining footholds in their new homes.
Those from the affected countries said the ban would wrench families apart by upending travel plans and immigration cases. They said they worried that the ban would foment distrust and hostility toward Muslims and others from the targeted places. And they said that economic and business relationships would be cut off.
The ban is scheduled to go into effect on Monday, and bars travel to the United States by citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. There are some exemptions, including for those who have existing visas or green cards that allow them to live in the country.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Gemini Daily Horoscope Yahoo Life Astrology: June 08, 2025
You and business partners )or good friends if you work alone or aren't in charge) are getting along famously. Make the most of this energy by cementing deeper relationships with them. Improve your dating life and find 'the one' faster with your Weekly Finding Love Tarot Reading.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Hall declares victory over Davis for Fort Worth City Council District 6 seat
Dr. Mia Hall declared victory over opponent Daryl R. Davis II to the applause and cheers of friends, mentors and family Saturday night at her election watch party at Bowlounge. Unofficial polling data shows Hall leading with 57.12% over Davis's 42.88% in the race for the Fort Worth City Council District 6 seat. Allof the 19 polling locations are reporting. Hall will fill out-going Council Member Jared Williams's shoes to represent Southwest Fort Worth and Como. In the crowd during Hall's speech of thanks were Council Members Chris Nettles, Michael Crain and Elizabeth Beck and Crowley School Board Members Dr. Nedra Robinson and Chakina Watkins. Because none of the four candidates — Davis, Hall, Marshall Hobbs and Adrian Smith — received more than 50% of the votes on May 3, the top two vote-getters went to a runoff election. On May 3, Hall had 46.8% of the votes, followed by Davis with 28.49%, Hobbs with 21.57% and Smith with 3.14%. Now with early voting results, she leads by nearly 400 votes. There was a 4.47% voter turnout. Hall said she was overwhelmed by the outpouring of support from the voters. She was formerly a Crowley ISD Board Trustee and a member of the Fort Worth Zoning Commission. 'It's been my pleasure to to have served this community in the capacity of a trustee for the last 10 years,' Hall said, 'and just to see the voter turnout, and the fact that they are going to bestow or that I may have the opportunity to represent them as the District 6 councilwoman, is just very humbling.' Hall has promised safe neighborhoods, improved roads and infrastructure, enhanced city services and the fostering of economic development. 'I made promises to our neighbors, and I plan to honor those promises,' Hall said. 'Among those were to be responsive and to be accessible, and that's something that I want to be day one. The other part will be just getting my bearings meeting the other council men and women and me and my colleagues, and just getting my footing underneath me so that we can take the priorities that our District 6 neighbors have made and put them to work quickly, without delay.' Her opponent in the runoff, Davis, promised well-planned neighborhoods that are safe and affordable to live in.
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Diane Abbott Slams Keir Starmer's Immigration Speech For Being 'Fundamentally Racist'
Diane Abbott has declared that Keir Starmer's 'island of strangers' immigration speech was 'fundamentally racist' and copying Reform UK's rhetoric. The prime minister sparked comparisons right-wing former Tory minister Enoch Powell after he announced Labour's plans to slash the number of migrants coming to the UK last month. At the time, he said: 'In a diverse nation like ours, and I celebrate that, these rules become even more important. 'Without them, we risk becoming an island of strangers, not a nation that walks forward together.' Speaking at anti-austerity rally on Saturday, Abbott, a respected Labour backbencher, joined the chorus of critics who have called out the speech. The left-wing MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington particularly tore into Starmer's warning about becoming an 'island of strangers'. She said she was 'disturbed' to hear his remarks, noting: 'I thought that was a fundamentally racist thing to say, in the contrary to to Britain's history. My parents came to this country in the 50s. 'They were not strangers, they helped to build this country. So, I think Keir Starmer is quite wrong to say that the way you beat Reform is to copy Reform.' She also alleged that Starmer's claim that immigration has done 'incalculable damage to this green and pleasant land' is 'nonsense'. Abbott, formerly the shadow home secretary under Jeremy Corbyn, told the cheering crowds: 'Immigrants built this land, built this society!' She also warned that there was an international struggle to 'fight the rich and the powerful [and] to fight the racists,' including within her own party. Abbott concluded: 'We have to stand against these cuts, we have to stand against the austerity budget, and by coming together today, rallying together, we will win.' Thousands of trade unionists, campaigners and activists gathered to 'send a message' to the government about its welfare reforms ahead of the spending review next week. When pressed about the backlash to Starmer's immigration comments last month, his spokesperson told reporters the prime minister stood by his words. He said: 'The prime minister has made the argument that migrants make a massive contribution to the UK and have done for generations, not least those who came after the war. 'But it is also reasonable to recognise that uncontrolled migration of recent years has put pressure on public services.' The spokesman also said Starmer 'rejects previous speeches' made by Powell. Follow for the very latest political news!Abbott made the comments at an anti-austerity march earlier today — Politics UK (@PolitlcsUK) June 7, 2025 Abbott has become a regular critic of the prime minister over the last year, after she beat an attempt by the Labour hierarchy to drop her as an MP at the last election over allegations of anti-semitism. She accused the PM of having 'no feel for politics' when he chose not to compensate Waspi women and alleged Starmer treated her as a 'non-person' when a Tory donor said she 'should be shot'. 'He Has No Feel For Politics': Diane Abbott Re-Ignites Her Feud With Keir Starmer Diane Abbott Says Keir Starmer Treated Her As A 'Non-Person' Over Frank Hester Race Row Tory Party Accepts Another £5 Million From Donor Who Said Diane Abbott 'Should Be Shot'