US - US officials have further restricted visitor visas for Palestinians, by denying them to almost all applicants who use a Palestinian passport, media reports say.
The development comes days after 80 Palestinian officials were denied visas ahead of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Earlier in August, visitor visas were paused for people hoping to travel from the Palestinian territory of Gaza. This newly-reported decree would affect a wider group - including people living in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The Department of State did not explicitly confirm the move but said it was "taking concrete steps in compliance with US law and our national security". The decision was issued in a diplomatic cable dated 18 August, the New York Times and CNN reported. US consular officers were told to refuse non-immigrant visas to "all otherwise eligible Palestinian Authority passport holders", the communication was quoted as saying. That would apply to Palestinians hoping to come to the US for a range of purposes, including for business, study or medical treatment. The move meant that officials would be required to perform a further review of each applicant, which amounted to a blanket ban on issuing visas to Palestinians, the New York Times added in its report. It is not clear what prompted the reported move, though the Trump administration has been steadfast in its support for Israel's military campaign against Hamas in Gaza.
The news also follows last month's announcements by a number of other US allies - including the UK, Canada and France - that they would recognise a Palestinian state on certain conditions. US Vice-President JD Vance has said Washington has "no plans" to follow suit. The Trump administration has also cracked down on pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses. The move represents a further toughening of the president's stance on visas, following two earlier measures. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was among a group of dozens of Palestinian officials who were recently blocked from attending the UN General Assembly session in New York later this month, after US officials revoked his visa and accused the Palestinian Authority and Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), both of which Abbas leads, of undermining peace efforts. And the Department of State said on 16 August it had paused approvals of visitor visas for Palestinians from Gaza specifically, so that a review could take place. (BBC)