Audio By Carbonatix
Muslim immigrants and an advocacy group filed a fresh lawsuit against President Donald Trump’s latest version of a travel ban that placed indefinite restrictions on the entry of citizens from eight countries to the United States.
The suit filed late Monday in federal court in Maryland challenges a Sep. 24 Presidential proclamation limiting travel from Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Chad and North Korea. Certain government officials from Venezuela were also barred.
Six individual plaintiffs who are U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents with Iranian relatives who could be blocked from coming to the United States, along with the group Iranian Alliances Across Borders, claim the ban violates an immigration law that prevents discrimination based on nationality.
The complaint says that the majority of the people affected by the ban are Muslim and point to Trump’s campaign promises for “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.” The suit says North Korea and Venezuela were added so Trump could “cloak this latest iteration of his Muslim ban in religiously neutral garb by invoking a national security review.”
The latest ban goes fully into effect on Oct. 18 and could affect tens of thousands of potential immigrants and visitors. Trump has argued that the restrictions are necessary to tighten security and prevent terrorist attacks.
Department of Justice spokesman Ian Prior said the agency “will continue to vigorously defend the President’s inherent authority to keep this country safe.”
Trump’s proclamation followed on two earlier temporary travel bans against some of the same countries, after the government did a global review of information sharing and security screening protocols.
The first ban issued soon after Trump took office in January targeted seven countries but was blocked by courts following a hasty implementation and chaotic scenes at airports.
The second ban signed in March targeted six countries and was also blocked by lower courts. It was then partially revived by the Supreme Court in June. The third ban, with no clear end date, came out when the temporary measures expired.
On Friday the American Civil Liberties Union said it was seeking to amend an existing lawsuit in Maryland federal court filed against the previous March 6 ban to include the latest proclamation.
Legal experts say the new restrictions are likely on more solid footing, in part because they followed a detailed review by federal agencies.
Latest Stories
-
Fire guts Saboba Hospital’s Children Ward
3 minutes -
Interior Ministry extends aptitude test dates for WASSCE applicants in 2025/26 security services recruitment
51 minutes -
National Investment Bank donates GH₵1m to support GAF barracks redevelopment project
1 hour -
Gomoa-East demolition: 14 suspects remanded by Kasoa Ofaakor Court
2 hours -
Divers recover bodies of seven Chinese tourists from bottom of Lake Baikal
3 hours -
From windstorm to resilience: How Wa school is growing climate protection
4 hours -
Reclaiming the Garden City: Dr. Kwame Adinkrah urges Kumasi to rein in billboard proliferation
4 hours -
Bursar of Ghanata SHS arrested for alleged diversion of student food supplies
4 hours -
Trump says he will increase global tariffs to 15%
4 hours -
Bogoso-Prestea mine records first gold pour after 24-month shutdown
5 hours -
Ghana–ECOWAS talks end with renewed push for women and youth political inclusion
5 hours -
Interior Minister receives Hudai Foundation food donation for prison inmates during Ramadan
5 hours -
UBIDS to benefit from pre-fabricated US$6.6m 1k capacity classroom project
6 hours -
Interior Minister launches Automated Fire Safety Compliance System to enhance public safety
6 hours -
Africa must lead climate intervention conversation – Experts
6 hours
