Expanded Travel Ban Targeting Up to 39 Countries, Predominantly Muslim and African Nations
A sweeping expansion of travel restrictions targeting predominantly Muslim-majority and African nations, growing from the original first-term ban to cover 39 countries. The bans affect millions of people and have been widely characterized as religious and racial discrimination codified into immigration policy.
The Trump administration issued a series of travel bans in 2025 that expanded from the original first-term ban to cover people from up to 39 countries, predominantly Muslim-majority, African, and Southeast Asian nations. The initial June 2025 proclamation restricted entry from 12 countries and partially restricted 7 more. A December 2025 expansion added 7 additional countries including Syria and Palestine, with all restrictions taking effect January 1, 2026.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- On June 4, 2025, Trump issued a proclamation restricting entry from 12 countries (Afghanistan, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Myanmar, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen) and partially restricting 7 more (Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, Venezuela).
- In December 2025, the ban was expanded to fully restrict entry from 7 additional countries: Burkina Faso, Laos, Mali, Niger, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, and Syria — plus people with Palestinian Authority travel documents.
- The expanded ban affects people from 39 countries total and took effect January 1, 2026. The New York Immigration Coalition estimates 420,000 New Yorkers alone are affected.
- The targeted countries are overwhelmingly Muslim-majority, Black-majority, or from Africa and Southeast Asia — a pattern critics and legal experts describe as religious and racial discrimination in immigration policy.
- The American Immigration Council published an economic analysis showing the bans harm US economic interests, separating families and blocking skilled workers and students.
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 20, 2025
Executive order directs development of new travel restrictions
President Trump signs an executive order on inauguration day directing the development of new travel bans for national security purposes, signaling an expansion beyond the first-term restrictions.
June 4, 2025
First proclamation restricts entry from 19 countries
Trump issues a proclamation fully restricting entry from 12 countries (Afghanistan, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Myanmar, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen) and partially restricting entry from 7 more (Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, Venezuela).
December 16, 2025
Ban expanded to 39 countries including Syria and Palestine
The ban is expanded to fully restrict entry from Burkina Faso, Laos, Mali, Niger, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, and Syria. People with Palestinian Authority travel documents are also added. Total affected countries reach 39.
January 1, 2026
Expanded travel ban takes effect
The full expanded travel ban takes effect. The New York Immigration Coalition estimates 420,000 New Yorkers are at risk, and civil rights organizations file additional legal challenges.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
The Trump administration enacted a sweeping expansion of travel restrictions targeting people from predominantly Muslim-majority, African, and Southeast Asian countries. The bans grew in three phases through 2025, ultimately covering 39 countries and taking full effect on January 1, 2026.
June 2025 Proclamation
On June 4, 2025, President Trump issued a presidential proclamation fully restricting entry from 12 countries: Afghanistan, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Myanmar, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen. The proclamation also partially restricted entry from 7 additional countries: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela.
December 2025 Expansion
In December 2025, the ban was expanded to fully restrict entry from seven more countries: Burkina Faso, Laos (upgraded from partial), Mali, Niger, Sierra Leone (upgraded from partial), South Sudan, and Syria. People traveling with Palestinian Authority documents were also added to the restrictions.
Scale of Impact
The expanded ban affects people from 39 countries. The New York Immigration Coalition estimated that 420,000 New Yorkers alone were at risk. The American Immigration Council published an economic analysis documenting the costs to the US economy, including the loss of skilled workers, students, and the separation of families with members already living in the United States.
Pattern of Discrimination
The pattern of countries targeted reveals a systematic focus on Muslim-majority, Black-majority, and African nations. Legal experts and civil rights organizations have consistently characterized the bans as religious and racial discrimination encoded into immigration policy.
The Asian Law Caucus published a detailed FAQ noting that the bans disproportionately affect communities of color and Muslim communities, and that the national security justification fails to account for the lack of any documented terror attacks by nationals of the banned countries.
Legal Analysis
- ICCPR Article 2 (Non-Discrimination): The ban systematically targets people based on national origin, with a pattern that correlates strongly with religion and race.
- ICCPR Article 18 (Freedom of Religion): The disproportionate targeting of Muslim-majority countries implicates religious freedom protections.
- ICCPR Article 26 (Equal Protection): The ban denies equal protection to people based on their country of origin.
- ICERD Article 1 (Racial Discrimination): Distinctions based on national or ethnic origin that impair the enjoyment of human rights constitute racial discrimination.
- Refugee Convention Article 3: The convention prohibits discrimination in asylum based on race, religion, or country of origin.
Why This Is Classified Severe
- Scale: 39 countries affected, millions of people barred from entry, hundreds of thousands of US residents with family ties to banned countries.
- Discriminatory pattern: The overwhelming concentration on Muslim-majority and African nations demonstrates systematic targeting based on religion and race rather than individualized security assessments.
- Family separation: Families with members in the United States are permanently separated from relatives in banned countries.
- Refugee exclusion: The ban blocks refugees from some of the world's most conflict-affected regions — Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Afghanistan, Yemen — from seeking protection in the United States.
- Escalating scope: The ban has expanded repeatedly, from the original first-term version to 19 countries in June 2025 to 39 by January 2026, with no indication the expansion has stopped.
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
Trump bans travelers from a dozen countries, reviving a measure from his first term
Trump expands US travel ban to include Syria, Palestine
Trump Expands U.S. Travel Ban List to 39 Countries
Trump Admin Expands Muslim & African Ban, Putting 420K New Yorkers at Risk
Trump's 2025 Travel Ban: Who Is Affected and What It Could Cost the U.S. Economy
Understanding Trump's Travel and Immigration Bans
Travel Ban List: Expansion, Map, and Trump
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