Home news Democrats decry Trump travel ban as a ‘distraction’ and say it won’t make America safer – live | Trump administration

Democrats decry Trump travel ban as a ‘distraction’ and say it won’t make America safer – live | Trump administration

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Democrats decry Trump travel ban as a ‘distraction’ and say it won’t make America safer

Democrats have decried Donald Trump’s travel ban as a “distraction” and say it will not make the United States safer.

Senator Chris Murphy, from Connecticut, said on X yesterday that “it was no coincidence” that Trump announced the ban last night:

Not a coincidence Trump announced his travel ban tonight. He’s trying to distract us from the core story. And the core story is their bill to throw 15 million people off their health care in order to give a $270,000 tax cut to the richest Americans.

Senator Adam Schiff, from California, said “bigotry is not a national security strategy” and the ban would “only further isolate the US” from the rest of the world. He posted on X:

This is Trump’s reckless first term travel ban all over again. Just like before, Trump’s expanded ban on travelers from around the world will not improve our national security and will only further isolate the US from the rest of world [sic]. Bigotry is not a national security strategy.

Senator Ed Markey, from Massachusetts, wrote on X:

Make no mistake: Trump’s latest travel ban will NOT make America safer. We cannot continue to allow the Trump administration to write bigotry and hatred into US immigration policy.

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Afghan women waiting for visas feel betrayed and abandoned by US travel ban – Reuters

Afghan women’s rights defender Fatima, 57, who is waiting in limbo in Pakistan for her US visa to be processed, had her dreams shattered overnight after Donald Trump included Afghans among those banned from entering the US.

She worked for decades for US-funded projects in central Afghanistan and now risks being pushed back to her home country, where she fears for her safety and her teenage daughter is unable to attend school. Giving only her first name for security reasons, she told Reuters:

Unfortunately, the decisions made by President Trump turned all the hopes and beliefs of us into ashes. We are not al-Qaeda, we are the ones who fought back, we are the ones who gave our youth, our strength, our physical energy, our voices, everything we had, for the dream of a peaceful nation, for a country where we could simply breathe, we stood beside Nato forces. And today, to be abandoned by America is not only tragic, it is devastating, It is a source of deep despair.

In the chaotic withdrawal of US-led foreign troops as Taliban forces seized Kabul in 2021, western countries vowed to help, especially those Afghans who had worked for them or on projects they backed. But many have been disappointed.

Then-president Joe Biden pledged to help “Afghan allies” and introduced the P-2 programme for admission as refugees for Afghans who met certain criteria, including having worked for US organisations and media.

The main refugee advocate agency this year estimated that between 10,000-15,000 Afghans were waiting in Pakistan for their visas to be processed, though that included applicants to the Special Immigration Visa (SIV) program for those who directly assisted the US military and government, which was exempted from this week’s order.

Fatima said she had hoped never to leave her country but as the prominent head of a women’s rights group she felt she had no choice after the Taliban returned to power. The US government instructed her to travel to a third country for processing and like many, her only option was neighbouring Pakistan where she arrived in 2023. She finally received notice that she should send her family’s passports to prepare for a flight in January. But a decision that month by Trump to halt refugee processing threw that into disarray and Fatima has not heard from US authorities since.

In the meantime, Pakistan began once again ramping up a repatriation drive that began in 2023, leaving many in the pipeline for US processing fearful of even leaving the house in case they were stopped by police.

Mahbouba Seraj, a prominent Kabul-based women’s rights advocate, said the new US decision was a huge blow to women’s rights defenders and other vulnerable groups.

This is absolutely terrible because a whole lot of those … people were waiting, they have all of their paperwork done, they are completely vetted, they are all ready to come to the US, they have sold their houses, they have no life in Afghanistan and they are all waiting. Now this is what happens.

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