Trump’s executive order redirects asphalt to ‘Muslim ban’ Muslim ban news
Washington, DC – Civil rights advocates in the US are raising alarm over an executive order signed by the President Donald Trump They said they made the case for another travel ban targeting Muslim-majority countries.
This dispositionReleased on Monday, it could also be used to target foreign nationals who are in the United States legally and to reach out to international students who are Palestinian rights advocates.
Deepa Aliagean, an attorney at the International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP), an advocacy group, said the new order’s “xenophobic” travel ban is bigger and worse than several other “xenophobic” travel bans it has imposed. Muslim-majority countries in the first term in 2017.
Now the worst part of this is that they don’t want to ban people who are not only entering the United States, but also using the same rationale as a basis to expel them from the United States,” Alaragean told Al Jazeera.
To change the name of the New Order Administration officials said Administration officials “lack sufficient investigation and complete suspension information to impose a partial or complete suspension on the admission of nationals of these countries.”
But it goes further. It calls for determining the number of citizens entering the United States from those countries starting in 2021 Joe Biden’s presidency – and collect “relevant” information about their “movements and activities”.
The White House then orders “immediate steps” to deport foreign nationals from those countries.
Trump’s executive order also states that the administration must ensure that foreign nationals, including American citizens, do not support their culture or government or support foreign terrorists.
He calls the call order ‘intimidating’
Alaragean warned that the decision, which “protects the United States from foreign terrorists and other national security and public safety threats,” could do more damage immigrant families More so than the 2017 travel restrictions, known collectively as the “Muslim ban.”
The order’s vague language, he said, is “intimidating” because the administration appears to give us broad authority to recommend actions against people it targets.
“At its core, it’s just another way to get people out get the person outto break up families, to make sure that people know they are not welcome and that the government will bring its power against them, to stir up fear and that the government will bring its power to bear against them,” Alaragesan Alagesan told Al Jazeera.
Other advocacy groups have also identified the order since publication.
The American-Arab Discrimination Committee (ADC) said the order goes further than the 2017 Muslim ban by giving the government “wider latitude than ideological expletives” to deny visas and remove people from the United States.
“ADC is calling on the Trump administration to just steer clear of sowing and target all communities it targets,” the group said in a statement.
“America’s Promise freedom of speech and the phrase — a principle the president has long emphasized himself — now stands in stark contrast to his new executive order. “
The Muslim Public Affairs Council also warned in a statement about the risk of “a fact called security protocols acting as a Muslim ban” on increasing preaching measures.
Meryam Jamshi, a professor at the University of Colorado Law School, said that the order was revived travel ban From Trump’s first term while pushing a right-wing agenda in the broader culture wars.
Parts of the decree are also aimed at the Palestinians and Supporters of Palestinian rightsJamwidi added.
“Right, by perpetuating this notion, foreign, brown, Muslim people threaten white Judeo-Christian, effectively – ‘real Americans’.”
‘The ugliest possible act’
In 2018, he stated that he was in several US media Trump aides said The U.S. should accept more immigrants from places like Norway than from Haiti, El Salvador, and African nations, which it calls “S***hole countries.”
Many right-wing politicians – including Trump’s current vice president, JD Vance – have embraced the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory, which they argue is an effort to replace native-born Americans with immigrants.
Trump’s latest order warns against foreign nationals in the United States seeking to disrupt or replace American culture.
Still, experts say it can’t be used as a means of mass deportation.
“Gives travel orders to agencies to basically use the full extent of legal frameworks and loopholes to do the most outrageous things to get people out. the president he decided he didn’t want to be here,” Alaragesan said.
“That said, there are still laws that limit the grounds on which someone can be removed, and there are protections for people who are in deportation proceedings.”
Jamshidi also noted that the Order gives the authority to deport people, noting that the Immigration Act does not refer to it, to remove foreign nationals, which is how the certification would be.
The order relies on the presidency and part of the nationality to restrict entry to the United States for “literally any alien” — but not to deport people here.
“This is probably not a blanket deportation charge,” Jamshidi said.
But he warned that the order could lead to further scrutiny of people in those countries and curbs on political activities — particularly Palestinian solidarity — that could be perceived as working at the direction of the administration.

Efforts to deport student activists
The order states that U.S. officials “protect foreign nationals when our constitutional republic stands, or our constitutional republic stands, or the overthrow of foreign nationals, or the overthrow or replacement of foreign nationals, or the overthrow or replacement of a culture that provides foreign aid to “Terrorists.”
Jamshidi said the language was “about foreign nationals, including foreign students involved in Palestinian propaganda.”
Often called “Pro-Hamas” by pro-Israel politicians, Jamshidi said Trump’s decision could be used to target Palestinian rights advocates in the United States on student visas.
Both the shirt and the Secretary of State Marco Rubio have previously called for the deportation of international students.
As Palestinian solidarity sweeps away protests Universities of the country In Gaza, pro-Israel supporters, especially Republicans, have painted student demonstrators as a threat to campus security.
Rubio led a Senate letter Biden administration It calls for the expulsion of international students who participated in a protest in support of the Palestinians in October 2023.
The letter drew parallels between the student protesters and the 9/11 attackers. “Lessons learned on September 11, 2001, when terrorists, many of whom studied or obtained visas in the United States, carried out the deadliest attack on American soil.”
“Twenty-two years later, unfortunately, our country is witnessing public demonstrations from terrorist sympathizers of Hamas taking to the streets and carrying out brutal attacks against the State of Israel,” his letter said.
The 2024 Republican Party platform also calls for “Pro-HAMAS RADIALS” to be called “Radicals” to “remake” college campuses “safe and patriotic.”
‘Broader implications’
Dima Khalidi, director of the Palestine Legal Group, said it was “clear” that Trump’s latest executive order specifically targeted Palestinian rights advocates.
He added that although the order specifies Israel, pro-Israel, pro-Israel groups are not allies of the United States, anti-Israel or even anti-Semitic, but not as “America” ​​as “America”.
“We have to add to this order a larger overhaul that is happening in this order and is part of a larger purge that Trump seems very intent on carrying out,” Khalidi told Al Jazeera.
He said the Trump administration wants to use a broad discretion in immigration law for Palestinian rights advocates because of their views and extreme free speech rights.
“They take a picture for people who are really acceptable, what is not; what is American, what is not; patriotic, what is not,” Khalid told Al Jazeera.
The bottom line, critics say, is that Trump’s first “Muslim ban” has far-reaching implications for travelers from several Muslim-majority countries, including what the executive order means. to be an American.
For example, the order calls for measures to “promote the proper assimilation” and “unified American identity” of immigrants.
Jamshidi said the order had “broader implications for all kinds of groups” than the initials of the Muslim ban.
“Another salvo in the true culture wars,” he told Al Jazeera.