The United States has revoked all visas held by South Sudanese passport holders, citing South Sudan’s refusal to accept repatriated citizens. The move, announced by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, marks a significant escalation in the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement efforts. The administration has repeatedly warned that countries refusing to take back deported nationals will face penalties such as visa sanctions or trade restrictions.
Rubio emphasized that South Sudan has failed to uphold the international principle requiring nations to accept their citizens when other countries seek their removal. “Effective immediately, the United States is revoking all visas held by South Sudanese passport holders and halting further issuance,” Rubio said. He added that the policy could be reconsidered if South Sudan fully cooperates.
This decision comes amid growing instability in South Sudan, raising fears of a return to civil war. African Union mediators arrived in the capital, Juba, for crisis talks following the house arrest of First Vice President Riek Machar. The government, led by President Salva Kiir, accuses Machar of inciting a new rebellion. Machar, a key figure in the 2013–2018 civil war that left hundreds of thousands dead, previously led rebel forces and was allied with the White Army militia, though his supporters deny current ties.
Recent clashes in Upper Nile state between government forces and the White Army have further strained the fragile peace. The previous conflict was largely ethnic, with Kiir backed by the Dinka majority and Machar by the Nuer.
South Sudan’s embassy in Washington has not yet responded to the U.S. visa ban. The situation underscores rising tensions both diplomatically and domestically, with U.S. immigration policy increasingly tied to international cooperation on deportations.


Trump Issues 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran Over Strait of Hormuz, Threatens Power Grid Strikes
Tesla FSD EU Approval Delayed to April 10 as RDW Completes Final Review
Trump Administration Opens Two New Investigations Into Harvard Over Discrimination and Antisemitism
U.S. Appeals Court Strikes Down FTC Order Against TurboTax "Free" Advertising
Kristi Noem Ends Western Hemisphere Tour in Diminished Role After DHS Firing
Trump Links DHS Funding to Voter ID Legislation
Iran-Israel Missile Strikes Continue Amid Mixed Signals on U.S.-Iran Diplomacy
US Accelerates Taiwan Arms Deliveries Amid Rising China Threat
WTO Reform Talks Begin in Cameroon Amid Global Trade Tensions
Pentagon Revises Media Access Policy Following Court Order
Israel Eyes Litani River as New Border Amid Escalating Lebanon Offensive
China Escalates BHP Iron Ore Ban Amid Contract Dispute
Maduro Faces Rare Narcoterrorism Charges in U.S. Court
Microsoft Backs Anthropic in Legal Fight Against Pentagon's AI Blacklist
UK Regulators Demand Social Media Platforms Strengthen Children's Age Verification 



