The US New Immigration Policy Just Blew Up the Green Card Playbook — Here’s Everything You Need to Know

US New Immigration Policy 2026: The Complete Guide (Green Card, Visa Rules & What Africans Must Know)
US New Immigration Policy · Updated May, 2026

USCIS dropped a bombshell memo that rewrites how immigrants get permanent residency in America. Students, tourists, workers, tech founders — if you have any interest in a US Green Card, this changes everything. And yes, this includes you, Naija. You too, Ghana. Kenya, come in.

Dratech International 14-min read Live updates
✅ LAST UPDATED: May 23, 2026 — This article reflects USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 issued May 21–22, 2026. Bookmark this page. We update as news breaks.

The 60-Second Version (For the Busy Reader)

  • What happened: USCIS issued Policy Memo PM-602-0199, declaring that adjusting your immigration status to a Green Card from inside the US is now an extraordinary privilege — not a standard right.
  • The new default: If you’re in the US on a student, tourist, or work visa and want a Green Card, you will likely need to leave the US and apply through a US Embassy in your home country (consular processing).
  • Who’s most affected: F-1 students, B-1/B-2 tourists, J-1 exchange visitors, some employment visa holders — and YES, Africans in particular face extra hurdles.
  • The scary part: There’s NO “grandfathering” for pending I-485 applications. Already-filed cases may also be affected.
  • What’s NOT clear yet: USCIS hasn’t defined exactly what “extraordinary circumstances” means. Lawyers say the vagueness is intentional.
  • Your first move: Hire a licensed US immigration attorney. Today. Not tomorrow.
PM-602-0199
The USCIS Policy Memo number that changed everything
2.5M
Sub-Saharan Africans residing in the US as of 2024
1M+
People in employment-based Green Card backlogs (mainly Indian nationals)
7,500
FY2026 refugee admissions cap — the lowest since the program began

1. What Just Happened? The US New Immigration Policy Explained

Let’s set the scene. It’s the morning of May 21–22, 2026. Immigration lawyers across the US begin receiving alerts. USCIS — the agency that handles immigration benefits in America — has just dropped a policy memo with a title longer than a Nigerian film synopsis:

“Adjustment of Status is a Matter of Discretion and Administrative Grace, and an Extraordinary Relief that Permits Applicants to Dispense with the Ordinary Consular Visa Process.” — USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199, May 21, 2026

In plain English? Getting a Green Card while sitting inside the United States is no longer the standard path. It is now a special favour. A favour that the US government may — or may not — grant depending on your circumstances, your history, and essentially, whether the adjudicating officer woke up on the right side of the bed.

This isn’t a minor tweak. This is a restructuring of the entire framework that tens of thousands of immigrants have been using — quietly, legally, and confidently — for decades. The adjustment of status process (filing Form I-485 from inside the US) has been the go-to path for millions: international students falling in love with the country and getting a job, tourists who got married, workers whose employers sponsored them. That comfortable, in-country pathway? USCIS just put a big, red “extraordinary circumstances only” stamp on it.

⚠️ Critical Alert USCIS Director statement: “From now on, an alien who is in the US temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply, except in extraordinary circumstances.” — USCIS Press Release, May 22, 2026.

The agency says this is about “restoring the original intent of immigration law.” Skeptics — and there are many — say it’s the latest salvo in the Trump administration’s broad effort to reduce overall immigration into the United States. Whatever your political read, the impact is real and immediate.

2. What Is the New Green Card Rule in 2026?

To understand the earthquake, you first need to understand the old terrain. Under decades of standard US immigration practice, if you were in the US legally, you had two paths to a Green Card:

📊 INFOGRAPHIC — The Two Green Card Paths (Before vs. After May 2026)
1
Get Approved (I-130 or I-140)
2a
OLD: File I-485 Inside the US
NOW REQUIRES “Extraordinary Circumstances”
NEW DEFAULT: Consular Processing Abroad

Path A: Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) — AFFECTED ⚠️

This was the dream path. You’re already in the US on a visa, your Green Card petition gets approved, and you file Form I-485 to “adjust” your status to permanent resident — without ever having to leave the country. No risky international travel. No waiting at a US Embassy in Lagos or Accra. No consular interview roulette. Under the new US immigration policy, this path is now classified as “extraordinary relief.”

Path B: Consular Processing — THE NEW DEFAULT ✅

This is the path USCIS now wants you on. Your petition gets approved, you get on a plane home, you wait for a visa appointment at the US Embassy or Consulate in your home country, you attend an interview, and — if approved — you travel back to the US as a permanent resident. It sounds simple. It is not. Consular backlogs are severe. Appointment wait times at major African US Embassies (Lagos, Accra, Nairobi) can stretch from months to well over a year. And if you get refused? You’re stuck.

The “Extraordinary Circumstances” Wildcard

Here’s where it gets nuanced. USCIS says Adjustment of Status will still be granted in extraordinary circumstances. But they haven’t published a definitive list of what qualifies. What we know from the memo and legal analysis is that officers will weigh:

  • Long period of lawful residence in the US
  • US citizen spouse, children, or parent with demonstrated hardship if applicant must leave
  • Serious medical conditions for the applicant or US family members
  • Consistent compliance with visa status (no overstays, no unauthorized work)
  • Clean tax and criminal record — moral character
  • Evidence that consular processing poses an extreme hardship (not just inconvenience)
  • H-1B, L-1 and their dependents (H-4, L-2) appear to face less scrutiny as “dual-intent” visa holders

Negative factors that will sink your case include: visa overstays, unauthorized employment, any form of immigration fraud or misrepresentation, and criminal history. The memo essentially says: if you’ve been bending the rules, forget about it.

3. Who Is Affected by the US New Immigration Policy?

Visa Category Visa Type Impact Level What Changes
International Students F-1, M-1 HIGH IMPACT Must likely return home for consular processing; OPT/CPT graduates planning AOS most affected
Tourists / Visitors B-1, B-2 HIGH IMPACT Entered with single intent; US marriage or employment won’t easily justify AOS
Exchange Visitors J-1, J-2 HIGH IMPACT 2-year home residency requirement already applies to many; now compounded
High-Skill Workers H-1B, H-4 MODERATE “Dual intent” holders may have stronger arguments; watch for category-specific USCIS guidance
Intracompany Transfers L-1, L-2 MODERATE Same as H-1B; dual-intent may provide some protection
TN (Canada/Mexico) TN MODERATE Non-immigrant intent required; AOS now very uncertain
Asylees/Parolees Various MODERATE Separate statutory provisions; watch for case-by-case guidance
Religious Workers R-1 HIGH IMPACT Single-intent visa; social media screening also newly added
Fiancé(e) Visa K-1, K-2 HIGH IMPACT Social media screening added March 2026; AOS path now uncertain post-marriage
💡 Key Insight The memo does NOT contain a “prospective only” clause. This means it likely applies to already-pending I-485 applications. If you have a case in process, consult an attorney now — your case may be reopened for review.

4. What This Means for Nigerians, Ghanaians, Kenyans & Africans

Let’s talk about our people. As of 2024, approximately 2.5 million people from sub-Saharan Africa were residing in the United States — including naturalized citizens, permanent residents, and non-immigrants like temporary workers and the 65,000 African students enrolled in that year alone. African immigrants are, statistically, among the most educated and economically active immigrant groups in the US. But right now, they’re getting hit from multiple directions.

The Double Jeopardy Facing African Immigrants

The new AOS restrictions land on top of existing travel restrictions that already complicate African immigrants’ journeys:

Country Travel Restriction Status (2026) DV Lottery Impact AOS Risk Level
🇳🇬 Nigeria Partial Restrictions Historically high DV recipient — now suspended VERY HIGH
🇬🇭 Ghana Partial Restrictions + Jan ban Affected by DV suspension VERY HIGH
🇰🇪 Kenya No major ban (as of May 2026) Moderate DV participation HIGH
🇸🇳 Senegal Partial Restrictions Affected VERY HIGH
🇿🇦 South Africa Largely unrestricted (Afrikaner refugee priority) Not a major DV participant MODERATE
🇧🇫 Burkina Faso Full Entry Ban (Jan 2026) N/A CRITICAL
🇲🇱 Mali Full Entry Ban (Jan 2026) N/A CRITICAL
🇹🇿 Tanzania Partial Restrictions Moderate impact VERY HIGH

For a Nigerian student who graduated from an American university and was hoping to use OPT/STEM OPT time to land an H-1B, file an I-140, and then adjust status — that entire plan now has a massive question mark hanging over it. The consular processing route means returning to Lagos, getting in a queue at the US Embassy on Eleke Crescent, and hoping for an interview date that doesn’t stretch 18 months into the future.

The Diversity Visa Suspense

For years, the Diversity Visa (DV) lottery has been a golden ticket for tens of thousands of Africans. Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya, and other African nations have historically ranked among the top recipients. But the DV-2027 registration has been delayed with undisclosed changes. And DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has explicitly called for the program’s suspension. If the DV lottery is killed or radically restructured, an entire pathway that millions of Africans have counted on disappears overnight.

“African migrants to the US are more likely to be active participants in the labor force than other immigrant groups, and are more likely to have post-secondary degrees than even US citizens.” — Brookings Institution, Foresight Africa Report, March 2026

Yet despite these credentials, Africans are facing the most restrictive US immigration environment in a generation. It’s a brutal irony that the continent sending some of America’s most educated, most entrepreneurial immigrants is being simultaneously locked out at multiple gates.

5. Adjustment of Status vs. Consular Processing: Full Comparison

Factor Adjustment of Status (I-485) Consular Processing
Where you apply Inside the US US Embassy/Consulate in home country
Travel during process Need Advance Parole to travel internationally Must leave the US; re-entry as immigrant
Work authorization Can apply for EAD while waiting No US work authorization until visa issued
Processing time 8–24+ months (USCIS backlog) Varies by post; Lagos/Accra: 12–24+ months
Risk if denied Removal proceedings; can remain pending appeal Denied; stuck in home country; must reapply
Family separation Family stays together in US Can mean years apart from US-based family
Cost ~$1,440 USCIS fee + attorney fees Embassy fees + travel + housing costs abroad
Status under new policy Extraordinary cases only Now the official default

6. All the Other Big US Immigration Policy Changes in 2026

The AOS memo is the headline, but 2026 has been relentless with immigration changes. Here’s everything on the table:

🚫 Travel Bans Expanded (Effective January 1, 2026)

Five new countries were added to full or partial travel bans: Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, South Sudan, and Syria. Additionally, 15 countries face partial restrictions, including Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, and Angola. Ethiopia and Ghana were listed in the January ban on new immigrant visas.

📱 Social Media Screening Expanded (March 30, 2026)

The US State Department expanded mandatory social media account screening to additional visa categories. Newly added: K-1, K-2 (fiancé visas), R-1, R-2 (religious workers), H-3, H-4, T, U, S, Q, G-5, and A-3 classifications. Your Instagram, X (Twitter), Facebook, TikTok — all fair game. Applicants must set their accounts to PUBLIC for consular review. F and J visa applicants have been screened since June 2025.

🎰 Diversity Visa Lottery Under Threat

The DV-2027 registration period has been indefinitely delayed. DHS leadership has called for a full suspension of the program. This is seismic for African applicants, who have historically made up the largest single regional group of DV winners.

🏠 Temporary Protected Status (TPS) Terminated for Multiple Countries

TPS has been terminated for: Afghanistan, Cameroon, Haiti, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, and Syria. Nationals from these countries who relied on TPS-linked Employment Authorization Documents (EADs) have faced or are facing their work authorization ending.

💰 Immigration Fees Increased (January 1, 2026)

Inflation-based fee increases took effect for asylum, parole, TPS-related filings, work authorization requests, ESTA, and EVUS applications. Immigration was already expensive. It just got more so.

👔 H-1B Scrutiny Intensified

A presidential proclamation and DHS guidance proposed tougher admission standards for high-skilled visas including H-1B, with heightened scrutiny on roles considered at risk of displacing US workers. Tech companies and African tech professionals working in the US are watching this closely.

📉 Refugee Cap at Historic Low

The 2026 refugee admissions ceiling is set at just 7,500 — the lowest limit since the US Refugee Admissions Program began. The program prioritizes White South African Afrikaners. Most other refugee groups, including Africans fleeing conflict, must obtain explicit exemptions from the ongoing refugee ban.

7. Best Countries for Immigration in 2026 (Plan B is Not a Failure)

Let’s be honest: if the US has become this difficult, complicated, and frankly unwelcoming for immigrants — especially African immigrants — it’s worth knowing your options. Here’s the global map of where immigrants, tech founders, students, and skilled professionals are actually winning in 2026.

🇨🇦

Canada

★★★★★

Express Entry grants PR in as little as 6 months. Welcomes 100,000+ immigrants per quarter. Strong Nigerian, Ghanaian, and Kenyan communities. Pathways for students, workers, and families.

Express Entry PNP Post-Study Work
🇩🇪

Germany

★★★★★

EU Blue Card for skilled professionals. High demand for engineers, IT workers, nurses. New Opportunity Card allows job seekers to come without prior offer. Strong economy, free university.

EU Blue Card Opportunity Card
🇵🇹

Portugal

★★★★☆

Digital Nomad Visa, D7 Passive Income Visa, Golden Visa (real estate). Fast PR path. Low cost of living vs. Western Europe. English-friendly. Pathway to EU citizenship in 5 years.

Digital Nomad D7 Visa Golden Visa
🇬🇧

United Kingdom

★★★★☆

Global Talent Visa for tech, science, and arts leaders. Skilled Worker Visa with no salary cap for certain roles. ILR after 5 years. Huge African diaspora. English-speaking. NHS jobs in high demand.

Global Talent Skilled Worker
🇦🇺

Australia

★★★★☆

Points-based skilled migration. High demand in healthcare, engineering, agriculture. Post-study work rights of 2–6 years. Strong quality of life. Growing tech sector in Sydney and Melbourne.

Skilled Independent Employer Sponsored
🇨🇭

Switzerland

★★★★★

Ranked #1 globally for immigrants by Remitly 2026 Immigration Index. World’s highest average salaries. Tech, pharma, and finance hubs. Challenging French/German/Italian language requirement.

EU/EEA Rules Skilled Worker
🇳🇱

Netherlands

★★★★☆

Highly Skilled Migrant Visa (fast-track). Amsterdam and Eindhoven are global tech hubs. 30% tax ruling for expats. English widely spoken. Gateway to wider EU.

Highly Skilled Migrant Startup Visa
🇦🇪

UAE / Dubai

★★★★☆

10-year Golden Visa for investors and skilled professionals. Zero income tax. Growing fintech and crypto sector. Large African community. No language barrier for English speakers. Easy entry for most Africans.

Golden Visa Freelance Permit
Country PR Timeline Main Pathway Best For African Visa
🇨🇦 Canada 6–18 months Express Entry / PNP Skilled workers, students Accessible
🇩🇪 Germany 21–33 months EU Blue Card Engineers, IT, Healthcare Accessible
🇬🇧 UK 5 years to ILR Skilled Worker / Global Talent Tech, NHS, Finance Accessible
🇵🇹 Portugal 5 years to citizenship D7 / Digital Nomad / Golden Visa Remote workers, investors Accessible
🇦🇺 Australia 1–3 years Points-based skilled Healthcare, construction, STEM Moderate
🇦🇪 UAE No PR (10yr Golden Visa) Golden Visa / Employment Finance, tech, entrepreneurs Very Accessible
🇳🇱 Netherlands 5 years Highly Skilled Migrant Tech, STEM, startups Moderate
🇯🇵 Japan 3–5 years Specified Skilled Worker / HSP Engineers, researchers Moderate

8. Your Action Plan: What You Should Do Right Now

✅ Action Required This section is the most important thing you’ll read. Immigration law is not DIY territory anymore — it never was, but it’s even less so now. Here is your step-by-step roadmap.

If You’re Currently in the US on a Temporary Visa and Planning to Get a Green Card:

  • IMMEDIATELY retain a licensed US immigration attorney. Not an “immigration consultant,” not a notario, not your uncle who read something on Reddit. A licensed attorney. This is not optional.
  • Do NOT travel internationally without legal advice first. Leaving and re-entering could complicate your status, especially if there’s a pending case or partial travel ban on your country.
  • Audit your current immigration status. Are you maintaining valid status? Any gaps in status, unauthorized employment, or minor violations need to be disclosed to your attorney — not hidden.
  • Gather documentation of US ties: tax returns, pay stubs, lease agreements, marriage or birth certificates of US citizen family members, medical records, bank statements, community service evidence.
  • If you have a pending I-485, contact your attorney today. The memo’s lack of a grandfather clause is a red flag that pending cases could be revived for review.
  • Monitor USCIS.gov for category-specific guidance. USCIS has indicated it will publish targeted guidance for different visa categories. This could change the picture significantly for H-1B holders and others.

If You’re in Africa and Planning to Come to the US:

  • Consular processing has just become the primary route — meaning the Embassy is your friend. Research processing times at your nearest US Embassy (Lagos, Accra, Nairobi, Johannesburg, Cairo).
  • If your country has travel restrictions, consult an immigration attorney about whether you are eligible for an exception or alternative pathway.
  • Explore the DV lottery status — and in parallel, explore Canada, Germany, and UK as alternative destinations. Diversify your immigration strategy.
  • For students: continue considering US universities (the education quality is unchanged), but plan for a longer, more complex path to permanent residency. US university + work experience + eventual immigration to Canada or Germany is a growing trend.

If You’re a Tech Professional or Founder:

  • H-1B holders have more protection under “dual intent” — but USCIS scrutiny of H-1B roles is increasing. Document the genuine specialization of your role meticulously.
  • Consider whether Canada’s Global Talent Stream (2–3 week processing for tech workers) or the UK Global Talent Visa might offer a better medium-term path.
  • If you’re a startup founder, Portugal’s D7 visa, Germany’s Freelance Visa, or UAE’s Golden Visa may offer a faster, more predictable route to residency while you build.
  • The Netherlands’ Highly Skilled Migrant Visa is fast-track (within 2–4 weeks for qualifying employers) and opens the door to the entire EU.

9. 15 Frequently Asked Questions on US New Immigration Policy 2026

These questions are optimized for Google’s AI Overviews, Knowledge Panels, and People Also Ask features — as well as AI search platforms like Perplexity and ChatGPT.

What is the new immigration law in the USA in 2026?+
In May 2026, USCIS issued Policy Memo PM-602-0199 declaring that Adjustment of Status — getting a Green Card from inside the US — is now an “extraordinary relief,” not an automatic right. Most temporary visa holders must now return to their home country and apply through consular processing at a US Embassy. This is the biggest change to the Green Card process in decades.
What is the new Green Card rule in 2026?+
Under USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 (May 2026), obtaining a Green Card while inside the US is now treated as a discretionary, extraordinary act — not the standard path. The new default is consular processing: applicants must leave the US and complete their Green Card process at a US Embassy or Consulate in their home country, except in tightly defined “extraordinary circumstances.”
Can a US citizen be denied entry back into the USA?+
US citizens generally cannot be permanently denied entry — but they can be detained and questioned, especially on suspicion of crimes, terrorism, or fraud. Non-citizens including Green Card holders can be denied entry for immigration violations, criminal history, or overstaying. US citizens traveling to countries under a travel ban may face difficulties if they lose travel documents abroad.
What are the new immigration rules in 2026?+
Key 2026 changes: (1) Adjustment of Status now requires “extraordinary circumstances”; (2) Social media screening expanded to K-1, R-1, H-4, and other categories from March 2026; (3) Refugee cap set at 7,500 — the lowest ever; (4) Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, South Sudan, Syria added to travel ban; (5) Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia, Senegal face partial restrictions; (6) Diversity Visa lottery suspended; (7) TPS terminated for multiple nations; (8) H-1B scrutiny increased.
What is the US immigration plan from 2026 to 2028?+
The Trump administration’s 2026–2028 immigration trajectory includes: mandatory consular processing for most Green Cards, stricter visa adjudications, expanded social media vetting, lower refugee admissions, enhanced border enforcement, reduced TPS approvals, and a focus on reducing overall immigration volumes while maintaining some high-skill tech and investment-based pathways. Category-specific USCIS guidance is expected throughout 2026.
Which country is best for immigration in 2026?+
Top immigration destinations in 2026 by ease, opportunity, and pathway speed: (1) Canada — Express Entry, fastest PR in 6 months; (2) Switzerland — Remitly #1 ranked globally for immigrants; (3) Germany — EU Blue Card, free university, tech sector growth; (4) Portugal — Digital Nomad and D7 visas, 5-year citizenship path; (5) Australia — points-based skilled migration; (6) UK — Global Talent Visa for tech and science leaders; (7) UAE — 10-year Golden Visa, zero income tax.
Which country is hiring foreigners in 2026?+
Countries actively recruiting foreign workers in 2026: Canada (healthcare, tech, skilled trades), Germany (engineers, nurses, IT professionals), Australia (healthcare, construction, agriculture), UAE (tech, finance, hospitality), UK (NHS healthcare workers, tech via Global Talent Visa), Netherlands (STEM graduates, Highly Skilled Migrant Visa), and Japan (tech workers, specified skilled worker visa). Many of these actively recruit African professionals.
What country is easiest to move to from the US in 2026?+
Portugal, Mexico, Costa Rica, and Canada are the easiest destinations for people leaving the US in 2026. Portugal’s D7 and Digital Nomad visas are popular with remote workers. Mexico requires no initial visa for US citizens or most passports. Canada’s Express Entry is structured and fast for skilled workers. Spain and Germany are strong options for tech professionals and EU freedom of movement.
Does the new USCIS memo apply to pending I-485 applications?+
Most likely yes. Unlike other recent USCIS policy changes that explicitly applied “prospectively only,” Policy Memo PM-602-0199 contains NO grandfathering provision for already-pending I-485 applications. Legal experts warn this means even existing cases could be reviewed under the new stricter standard. Consult an immigration attorney immediately if you have a pending I-485.
What visa categories are most affected by the new 2026 US immigration policy?+
Most affected: F-1 (students), B-1/B-2 (tourists/business), J-1 (exchange visitors), R-1 (religious workers), and K-1 (fiancé visas). Less affected: H-1B, L-1, and their dependents (H-4, L-2) as “dual-intent” visa categories. USCIS has indicated category-specific guidance is coming, which may clarify protections for certain groups.
How does the new US immigration policy affect Nigerians and Africans?+
Africans face compounded challenges: partial travel restrictions already affect Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Tanzania, and others; the DV lottery — a key pathway for Africans — is suspended; and now the AOS adjustment of status route is effectively closed for most temporary visitors. Africans on F-1, J-1, or tourist visas who planned to adjust status from inside the US must now pursue consular processing — a longer, riskier, and more expensive route through their home country Embassy.
What are “extraordinary circumstances” under the new USCIS memo?+
USCIS hasn’t published a definitive list. Officers weigh “totality of circumstances” including: long lawful US residence, US citizen family with demonstrated hardship, serious medical conditions, consistent visa compliance, clean tax/criminal record, and evidence that consular processing poses extreme (not just inconvenient) hardship. The intentional vagueness gives officers wide discretion — which is exactly why experienced legal representation is critical.
Is the Diversity Visa (DV) lottery still running in 2026?+
The DV-2027 registration period has been delayed with undisclosed changes announced by the State Department. DHS leadership has called for a full suspension of the program. African countries (Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya) have historically been among the top DV recipients. If the lottery is suspended or radically restructured, a major immigration pathway for Africans would be eliminated.
What is consular processing and how does it differ from adjustment of status?+
Consular processing means applying for your Green Card at a US Embassy in your home country — you must be outside the US. Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) lets you apply for a Green Card from INSIDE the US without leaving. The new 2026 USCIS policy makes Adjustment of Status an exception, requiring most people to use consular processing — meaning you must travel home and attend a US Embassy interview to get your Green Card.
What should I do if I’m in the US on a temporary visa and planning to get a Green Card?+
Act now: (1) Hire a licensed US immigration attorney — this is not optional. (2) Do NOT travel internationally without legal advice. (3) Maintain valid status — any violations now carry much higher risk. (4) Gather all evidence of US ties: family, employment, taxes, community involvement. (5) If you have a pending I-485, contact your attorney immediately. (6) Monitor USCIS.gov for category-specific guidance updates. (7) Develop a Plan B — Canada, UK, and Germany remain excellent alternatives.

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⚖️ Legal Disclaimer This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. US immigration law is complex and changes rapidly. Always consult a licensed US immigration attorney for advice specific to your situation. The information in this article is accurate as of May 23, 2026, based on USCIS Policy Memo PM-602-0199 and related official guidance.

Sources & External References

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Ekene Emmanuel
Ekene Emmanuel

Ekene Emmanuel is a seasoned tech autobiographer and professional journalist with fifteen years of storytelling experience. He has written for leading technology platforms and several national newspapers, shaping narratives that highlight innovation, leadership, and the people driving Africa’s digital shift. His work blends strong reporting with a talent for capturing the human journey behind every achievement. Ekene is currently part of the Dratech International media team, where he documents the stories of outstanding professionals and emerging innovators across the continent.

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