The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has suspended the processing of legal immigration applications from Nigeria and several other nations following the expansion of President Donald Trump’s travel ban. This latest directive, reported by CBS News and confirmed by BusinessDay on December 20, 2025, marks a significant intensification of the administration’s immigration restrictions, affecting applicants across Africa and Asia. The freeze encompasses a wide range of petitions, including requests for naturalization and green cards filed by lawful immigrants currently residing within the US.
According to administration officials, this suspension is a direct consequence of a security review initiated after a shooting incident in Washington, D.C. involving an Afghan national during Thanksgiving week. In response, the White House first froze applications from Afghanistan and then rapidly broadened the scope. On Tuesday, President Trump added 20 new countries to the restriction list. Under this new proclamation, citizens from five nations face a total entry ban, while 15 others—including Nigeria—are subject to “partial restrictions.” However, despite the term “partial,” USCIS has reportedly paused the adjudication of immigration cases for nationals of all newly listed countries while a “comprehensive review” is conducted.
The impacted list is extensive. Alongside Nigeria, the pause affects citizens of Angola, Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, among others. In total, nationals from over 60 percent of African countries now face significant hurdles in finalizing their US immigration status. Joseph Edlow, the USCIS Director, stated on social media that the agency is reviewing cases to “restore law and order,” asserting that the measure is necessary to vet individuals who might pose a threat. The administration maintains that these nations lack adequate security information-sharing systems, necessitating the pause.
For Nigerians, the timing is particularly disruptive, coinciding with the peak holiday travel season. The policy has triggered anxiety among the diaspora, with many fearing that pending applications for family reunification or permanent residency will be indefinitely stalled. Critics have condemned the move as disproportionate, arguing it unfairly targets African nations and disrupts long-standing diplomatic and economic ties.
Impact on Nigerian Businesses
The suspension of immigration processing poses a severe threat to the operational fluidity of Nigerian businesses, particularly those in the technology and professional services sectors. Nigeria’s booming tech ecosystem relies heavily on the cross-pollination of talent and capital between Lagos and US tech hubs like San Francisco and New York. If Nigerian founders and executives are unable to secure or renew visas, or if their path to residency is blocked, their ability to attend crucial investor meetings, accelerators, or board meetings in the US is compromised. This uncertainty could chill venture capital interest, as US investors may view Nigerian-domiciled startups as higher risk due to the potential immobility of their leadership teams.
Furthermore, the ban threatens to disrupt the supply chains and expansion plans of multinational corporations operating in Nigeria. Many large Nigerian conglomerates and banks maintain branches or partnerships in the US that require the rotation of senior staff. A freeze on green card and naturalization processing for Nigerian staff already in the US creates a precarious environment, potentially forcing top talent to return home or relocate to more friendly jurisdictions like Canada or the UK. This “brain drain” reversal—where talent is stuck in limbo rather than moving freely—could stifle the knowledge transfer and network building that is vital for Nigerian industries looking to compete on a global scale.




