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Yemeni community in USA faces separation from families as new travel ban takes effect

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12:51 2025/06/10
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The Trump administration implemented a travel ban today targeting 12 countries, including Yemen, which has left many in Detroit's ( Michigan, USA) Yemeni community concerned about their ability to visit family members abroad.

For Abdo Al Wajeeh, a kitchen helper at Haus of Brunch in Downtown Detroit, the ban means uncertainty about when he'll see his family again. "I miss them," Al Wajeeh said.

Al Wajeeh moved to Michigan in 2000 to support his wife and three children in Yemen. Every month, he sends home $1,000 to support his family, whom he typically sees once every two years.

Now with the travel ban in effect, Al Wajeeh fears returning to Yemen, worried he won't be able to re-enter the US. "It's sad," Al Wajeeh said.

The ban is also affecting local businesses. Maher Obeid, owner of the newly opened Haus of Brunch restaurant, says many of his employees are Yemeni nationals with family overseas.

"The majority of our employees are Yemeni," Obeid said. "Being Yemeni, I can see a close connection for us, and then it's easy to communicate, but a lot of them have come here either on visas, you know, to stay here and find a second home or a place to live. So it affects us when it comes to business."

Obeid explained that most of his employees see their families in Yemen only once every two years, if they're fortunate.

"Some people are getting stuck there. Banning them and the travel ban, making sure that they can't come back, that's just like they were not willing to jeopardize going to see their family, their livelihood," Obeid said.

Nabih Ayad of the Arab American Civil Rights League, who previously filed a federal lawsuit against the 2018 travel ban, questioned the selection criteria for the banned countries.

"If you look at possibly other nations that have worse vetting process, they're not on their list, possibly," Ayad said, noting that the current ban appears more targeted than previous versions.

"This one is more clarified and more centred, meaning that they had to basically identify why each nation was on that ban to justify their actions so it could possibly pass muster on the judiciary challenges that may face down the road here," Ayad said.

While Ayad investigates potential legal challenges to the ban, he believes the White House relied on selective data.

"That's kind of what we're looking into, all the other numbers of other nations that were not put on that list that could possibly show that this is just intended to really discriminate against certain black and brown Middle Eastern individuals from those nations and predominantly Muslim nations," Ayad said. 

جميع الحقوق محفوظة © قناة اليمن اليوم الفضائية
جميع الحقوق محفوظة © قناة اليمن اليوم الفضائية