According to a report, President Donald Trump has extended the scope of the travel ban with his first term, which includes 43 countries.
Although Trump failed to reproduce the “travel ban” on his second term “one day”, as he promised, he instructed cabinet members on January 20 to prepare a list of countries that faced full or partial travel restrictions because their “testing and scrutiny”. Within 60 days. Now, with this deadline approaching, a draft list of proposed countries that is banned from going to the United States is circulating New York Times Notified.
A White House official said Free No decision has been made.
It was developed by the State Department weeks ago, officials familiar with the matter told outlets.For, for, for,. Who warned that the White House would face changes after that.
Free The State Department has reached the comments.

According to the outlet, the draft list was separated into three parts – red, orange and yellow to display the ban level.
The “red” list includes 11 countries whose citizens will be fully banned from entering the United States: Afghanistan, Bhutan, Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen.
Ten countries whose citizens will be limited to entering but will not be banned, that is, they need to have a specific visa, they are on the list of “orange”. According to Outlet, the people of Belarus, Eritrea, Haiti, Laos, Myanmar, Pakistan, Russia, Sierra Leone, South Sudan and Turkmenistan will have to sit for personally interview for visas.
The “yellow” list includes 22 countries, mostly African countries, which are giving 60 days to address their concerns over the alleged “shortcomings”. If these nations do not comply, they take the risk of being placed on the list of red or orange. Position Notified.
The list includes Angola, Antigua and Barboda, Benn, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Cameron, Cape Verde, Chad, the Congo, the Republic of the Congo, Equal, Equality Genia, Gambia, Liberia, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, and St. Kitts. Wanwatu and Zimbabwe.

According to Outlet, the State Bureau’s security experts and embassy officials are reviewing the proposal and providing comments about the accuracy of the so -called flaws or whether there are “policy reasons” to avoid some rating.
In his January 20 executive order, Trump said the travel ban would “protect its citizens from foreigners who intend to attack terrorist attacks, threaten our national security, support hateful ideology, or otherwise exploit immigration for misconduct.”
In 2021, on the first day at the office of former President Joe Biden, he issued an announcement to lift Trump’s travel ban. He said that Trump was banned “A stain on our national conscience And [were] All our beliefs do not conflict with our long history to welcome people and have no faith.