
BBC News
Getty imageUS President Donald Trump announced a new ban for people in 12 countries and visited the first term of his first term.
But there are some main differences.
Originally, the ban was a series of legal defeats. This time, the policy seems to have been designed to avoid the same trap.
The predecessor, who aims to be seven Muslim countries and is called the “no Muslim ban” by critics, was ordered a week after Trump took office in the White House in 2017.
Since the other party claims to be constitutional and illegal because it is a discrimination against travelers based on religion, the ban was revised twice to overcome the court’s problems.
The Scaling Back version was eventually supported by the US Supreme Court in 2018, and this new ban is very similar.
Legal experts said Trump seems to have learned from the first attempt to the BBC.
Christi Jackson, an expert in the US immigration law of Laura Devine Immigration, said that the new ban is more legally stronger.
The first is that “clarity” was lacking, but the new limit was “wider range of” and “clearly defined” exemption.
There are similar points in countries selected by the 2017 ban and the 2025 ban, but most Muslims are not an explicit goal of the latest orders.
Barbara Mcquade, a lawyer at the University of Michigan and a US lawyer in the eastern Michigan, said it is expected to be approved by the Supreme Court based on the NewShour program of the BBC world service.
Since June 9, 12 countries, which are most severe, are mainly in the Middle East, Africa and Caribbeans, including Afghanistan, Iran and Somalia.
There will be a partial restriction on travelers in other seven countries, including Cuba and Venezuela.
Trump said the strength of the limit would be rated on the seriousness of the recognized threats, including terrorism.
In addition to Iran, however, none of the 12 countries that have reached an obvious ban on the US government’s terrorist list of terrorist lists were nominated.
Trump quoted Sunday’s Sunday case on Sunday, where a man was accused of throwing a molon cocktail to the protesters who attended the march for Israeli hostages in a video that announced a ban on X.
The claimed attacker was Egyptian. But Egypt does not appear in any list.
Trump also designated a high proportion of people who stayed in a visa for the reason for listing a particular country.
But the immigrant attorney, headquartered in the United States, said that there is a “lack of clarity” of what thresholds should be met by excessive stay rate of the state to place the country in the ban on the country. He suggested that he could be the basis for successful legal challenges.
The BBC said, “If you rely on this concept of excessive excessive fertility, you must define what it actually means.”
But he noted that the US law gives the president a wide range of authority to immigration policy.
Unlike the first ban, which lasted for 90 to 120 days, today’s order has no end date.
It was disappointed in the target country.
Venezuela described the Trump administration as “a superiorist who thinks he owns the world,” but Somalia promised to “participate in the conversation to solve the problem.”
Originally, the prohibition was sowed by mass protests and chaos at the US airport.
In 2021, Trump’s successor, President Joe Viden, called this policy as “stain to our national conscience.”
Immigrant lawyer SHABNAM LOTFI, who challenged the previous trip, said that it would be a “uphill battle” to overturn a new battle.
“The president has the authority to determine who is allowed in the United States,” he added.
“They thought more.”
Lotfi said that new restrictions can affect students and other visa applicants abroad.
“Students who are trapped in administrative process are affected. Also, they are the winners of the diversity visa lottery who paid and interviewed. They will not be visas now.”
“Even EB -5 investors who have invested more than a million dollars in the US economy are affected. H -1B visa holders can be trapped abroad and wait to return to US employers.”
Leyla Khodabakhshi’s additional report










