US Travel Ban Widens to 39 Nations
President Donald J. Trump on Monday signed a proclamation adding twenty new countries, including South Sudan, to America’s entry-restriction roster. The measure, described by the White House as a security safeguard, becomes operational on 1 January 2026.
The expanded list lifts the total number of affected states to 39, with Africa emerging as the most impacted continent under what US officials call a calibrated response to documentation gaps and information-sharing weaknesses.
Screening Concerns and Overstay Data
Washington’s decision followed a months-long interagency review involving Homeland Security, State, Justice and intelligence branches, which highlighted persistent deficiencies in South Sudan’s civil registry, passport issuance and biometric systems (Proclamation text).
Department of Homeland Security figures show a 6.99-percent B-1/B-2 visa overstay rate among South Sudanese travelers, while student and exchange categories recorded 26.09 percent, well above the global average (DHS Overstay Report).
Diplomatic Efforts and Remaining Hurdles
Juba had recently begun accepting deportees and opening dialogue with US officials in hopes of mitigating restrictions, Foreign Affairs Minister Deng Dau told reporters last week.
However, American agencies concluded that cooperation levels and identity-management reforms were still inadequate to guarantee timely verification of travelers or the repatriation of nationals subject to removal orders (White House statement).
Regional and Personal Implications
The full ban bars South Sudanese applicants from receiving tourist, student or worker visas, potentially limiting scholarly exchange and diaspora remittances that underpin many households.
Analysts fear ripple effects across East Africa’s labour markets, yet note that Washington provides a clear off-ramp: sustained improvements in documentation and data sharing could prompt a review before 2026.
Prospects for Policy Reversal
US diplomats insist the proclamation is not permanent; a country can be removed once objective benchmarks are met, an approach officials describe as both strict and results-oriented.

