Several countries are adjusting their travel advisories for the United States.
More and more countries are adjusting their travel advisories for the United States following reports that tourists have been detained by immigration service ICE and sent to prisons abroad. After Canada, Germany, Denmark, and Finland are now also warning their citizens. Citizens who belong to a minority group, including transgender and non-binary people, are especially advised not to travel to the U.S. unless strictly necessary. Our country and the Netherlands has also tightened its travel advisory.
Since returning to the White House, U.S. President Trump has signed several executive orders that have rolled back the rights of the LGBTQ community, particularly those of trans and non-binary individuals. For example, the U.S. government now only recognizes two genders (M/F), transgender soldiers are banned from serving in the military, and access to medical care and medication needed for the transition of underage trans individuals has been restricted or, in many cases, entirely cut off. Trans and non-binary people whose gender marker had previously been changed to reflect their gender identity or to an "X" have also received new passports reverting that change.
Since Trump’s return to power, mass deportations have resumed of individuals deemed to be living in the country illegally. The government agency ICE operates in a highly arbitrary manner. Anything that can be used as a pretext for deportation is being used to detain individuals and send them abroad, where they are locked up in prisons or disappear into the system. A German citizen residing in the U.S. was reportedly detained for a week, according to his family, and two German tourists spent 46 and 16 days respectively in detention. A French scientist was denied entry into the United States after customs agents found critical messages about the U.S. president on his phone. Canadian actress Jasmine Mooney was also detained at the U.S.-Mexico border and held for twelve days.
These countries have therefore updated their travel advisories, warning citizens that a criminal record or a passport with a gender marker that differs from the one assigned at birth may be grounds for arrest at the U.S. border and possible deportation. Denmark and Finland also recommend that trans and non-binary individuals contact the U.S. embassy in their home country before traveling.
This recommendation follows recent policy changes under the Trump administration, which recognizes people only by their biological sex and not by their gender identity.
Update March 25: Belgium has also updated its travel advice.
“The FPS Foreign Affairs and the Belgian embassy and consulates in the United States are closely monitoring the situation. The current travel advice already warns about the varying attitudes toward individuals from the LGBTQI+ community, which may differ from state to state,” says Foreign Affairs, which refers to the Human Rights Campaign website for more information about the stance in the different states.
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