
Every single African citizen who requested a visa was rejected,
according to the organizer of the African Global Economic and
Development Summit. , protesters and others from across the globe have been denied access to the US, which has also experienced a slump in tourism since Trump’s inauguration.
Rejected participants at the trade summit
came from Nigeria, Cameroon, Angola, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, Guinea,
Ghana, South Africa and more, according to Flowers. Trump’s travel ban
covers Somalia, Sudan and Libya in Africa, and citizens from those
countries did not seek visas for the event.
The long-term impact of the visa denials is a lack of new trade links
and business partnerships between US entrepreneurs and African nations,
said Flowers, who also represents southern California as a member of the District Export Council, a trade group affiliated with the US commerce department.
“We can’t have the government telling us to go do business with
Africa and then you slam the doors in their face,” she added, noting
that Trump has been in contact with Nigeria’s president. “We can’t survive as an internal country. We have to operate globally or we won’t be powerful.”
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