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Trump's Order Blocks Immigrants at Airports, Stoking Fear Around Globe
Saturday, 28 January 2017 15:26

Excerpt: "President Trump's executive order on immigration quickly reverberated through the United States and across the globe on Saturday, slamming the border shut for an Iranian scientist headed to a lab in Boston, an Iraqi who had worked as an interpreter for the United States Army, and a Syrian refugee family headed to a new life in Ohio, among countless others."

A woman greets her mother after she arrived from Dubai on Emirates flight 203 at John F Kennedy airport in Queens, New York. (photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters)
A woman greets her mother after she arrived from Dubai on Emirates flight 203 at John F Kennedy airport in Queens, New York. (photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters)


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Trump's Order Blocks Immigrants at Airports, Stoking Fear Around Globe

By Michael D. Shear and Nicholas Kulish, The New York Times

28 January 17

 

resident Trump’s executive order on immigration quickly reverberated through the United States and across the globe on Saturday, slamming the border shut for an Iranian scientist headed to a lab in Boston, an Iraqi who had worked as an interpreter for the United States Army, and a Syrian refugee family headed to a new life in Ohio, among countless others.

Around the nation, security officers at major international gateways had new rules to follow. Humanitarian organizations scrambled to cancel long-planned programs, delivering the bad news to families who were about to travel. Refugees who were airborne on flights when the order was signed were detained at airports.

Reports rapidly surfaced Saturday morning of students attending American universities who were blocked from getting back into the United States from visits abroad. One student said in a Twitter post that he would be unable to study at Yale. Another who attends the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was refused permission to board a plane. Stanford University was reportedly working to help a Sudanese student return to California.


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