List of people banned from entering the United States

The following is a list of notable people who are or were barred from entering the United States. The Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) of the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) handles deportation in the United States, often in conjunction with advice from the U.S. Department of State.[1] Such bans are often temporary, depending on the circumstances of each case, however, anyone previously deported or denaturalized is automatically barred from re-entering the United States without a waiver issued by the U.S. Department of State.

Currently banned edit

Individual Nationality Occupation Reason(s) for ban
Hamid Aboutalebi   Iran Diplomat and envoy to the United Nations Played a role as a translator for the militants who stormed the American Embassy in Tehran in 1979 and held 52 American citizens hostage for 444 days.[2]
Tareck El Aissami   Venezuela Politician and former Vice President of Venezuela (2017-2018) Allegations of major drug trafficking and ties to Hezbollah.[3]
Arnoldo Alemán   Nicaragua 81st President of Nicaragua (1997-2002) Political corruption scandals.[4][5]
Hussein Arnous   Syria 68th Prime Minister of Syria (since 2020) Continuous support for the Assad regime.[6]
Shaun Attwood   United Kingdom Former ecstasy distributor turned YouTuber After serving two years in Maricopa County Jail prior to sentencing, Attwood pleaded guilty for a sentence of nine and a half years, and served the balance of his sentence in the Arizona Department of Corrections. Banned from entering the United States for life following his return to the United Kingdom.[7][8]
Sali Berisha   Albania 2nd President of Albania (1992-1997) and 32nd Prime Minister of Albania (2005-2013) Involved in significant corruption, such as misappropriation of public funds and interfering with public processes, as well as enriching political allies and family members at the expense of the Albanian public.[9][10]
Abdalá Bucaram   Ecuador 38th President of Ecuador (1996-1997) "Involvement in significant corruption, including misappropriation of public funds, accepting bribes, and interfering with public processes".[11]
Roberto Sandoval Castañeda   Mexico Former Governor of Nayarit Allegations of collaborating with drug dealers.[12]
Raul Castro   Cuba Former First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba (2011-2021); brother of Fidel Castro Human rights violations and support for Nicolas Maduro's regime.[13]
Novak Djokovic   Serbia Professional tennis player Not meeting COVID-19 entry requirements, while not being vaccinated for COVID-19. Vaccine waiver request was denied by Department of Homeland Security.[14]
Pete Doherty   United Kingdom Singer Drug-related arrests and convictions in the United Kingdom; denied entry in June 2010 after spending 10 hours in detention in New York's JFK Airport, despite having a visa.[15]
Tom Doshi   Albania Former member of Albanian Parliament (2005-2021) Allegations of significant corruption.[16]
Liviu Dragnea   Romania Politician and former President of the Chamber of Deputies (2016-2019) Involvement in significant corruption.[17]
Daniil Frolkin   Russia Military officer Gross violations of human rights during the Bucha massacre[18]
Tyson Fury   United Kingdom Professional boxer Connections to the Kinahan crime family.[19]
Alejandro Giammattei   Guatemala 51st President of Guatemala (2020-2024) Allegations of “involvement in significant corruption” during his presidency, namely "accepting bribes in exchange for the performance of his public functions."[20][21]
Zhu Hailun   China Retired politician Involvement in the Uyghur genocide.[22][23]
Min Aung Hlaing   Myanmar Head of Burmese military junta (2021–present) Involvement in the Rohingya genocide[24]
Gabriel Escarrer Jaume   Spain Businessman & CEO of Meliá Hotels International Having business interests in Cuba.[25]
Carrie Johnson   United Kingdom Wife of former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, media consultant Visiting Somaliland as an independent country, which the United States does not recognize (viewing it as part of Somalia). Applicants under the electronic system for travel authorisation (ESTA) visa waiver programme, which allows Britons to spend up to 90 days in the US, are asked whether they have visited Somalia since March 2011.[26][27]
Abdel Rahman Jumma   Sudan Rapid Support Forces commander Ordering the assassination of Khamis Abakar, governor of West Darfur state during the War in Sudan (2023).[28]
Ramzan Kadyrov   Russia Head of the Chechen Republic (2007–present) Violations of human rights, including torture and extrajudicial killings.[29]
Daniel Kinahan   Ireland Boxing promoter and crime boss Suspected of involvement in organized crime.[30]
Andrew Krakouer   Australia Former Australian rules footballer Prior convictions relating to assault.[31]
Nigella Lawson   United Kingdom Chef, author and TV host of The Taste Drug-related admission in the United Kingdom.[32]
Grigory Leps   Russia Singer-songwriter Alleged connections with the Brothers' Circle.[33]
Adriatik Llalla   Albania General Prosecutor of the Republic of Albania (2012-2017) Involvement in significant corruption.[34][35]
Paul Makonda   Tanzania Former Regional Commissioner of Dar es Salaam "...involvement in gross violations of human rights, which include the flagrant denial of the right to life, liberty, or the security of persons."[36]
Nahum Manbar   Israel Businessman Accused of selling components for mustard gas and nerve gas to Iran in defiance of a US embargo.[37][38]
Liza Maza   Philippines Activist, politician Accused the United States federal government of human rights violations, was due to testify at a tribunal in Washington, D.C.[39][40]
Bernadette Devlin McAliskey   United Kingdom Independent Republican activist, UK Member of Parliament Involvement with the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA).[41]
Thierry Meyssan   France Journalist, conspiracy theorist, and political activist Active promotion of misinformation about the United States.[42]
Ibrahim Mousawi   Lebanon Journalist and spokesman for Hezbollah Links with Hezbollah.[43]
Azatbek Omurbekov   Russia Military officer Gross violations of human rights during the Bucha massacre[18]
Daniel Ortega   Nicaragua President of Nicaragua (2007–present) Repression of political opponents during the 2018–2022 Nicaraguan protests, reports of human rights abuses, and committing electoral fraud.[44]
Bilal Philips   Canada Islamic scholar Alleged links to terrorism and seeming to condone suicide bombers.[45]
Vlad Plahotniuc   Moldova Businessman and former member of Parliament Involvement in significant corruption.[46]
Marian Price   United Kingdom Former Provisional Irish Republican Army volunteer Terrorist activities, including involvement in the 1973 Old Bailey bombing.[47]
Chen Quanguo   China Communist Party secretary of Xinjiang (2016-2021) Involvement in the persecution of Uyghurs in China.[48][49]
Tarek William Saab   Venezuela Politician and lawyer Links with international terrorist organizations and subversive groups.[50]
Martin Sellner   Austria Neo-Nazi, Neue Rechte and Identitarian activist Links to the 2019 Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand.[51]
Shavendra Silva   Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Army officer Alleged war crimes in the Sri Lankan civil war.[52]
Mike Sonko   Kenya Second governor of Nairobi County (2017-2020) Involvement in significant corruption.[53]
John Stewart   United Kingdom Environmental campaigner Undisclosed reasons believed to be linked with his campaigning.[54][55]
Mark Thatcher   United Kingdom Businessman and son of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Conviction in South Africa related to a coup plot.[56]
Bovi Ugboma   Nigeria Comedian Visa issues.[57]
Amos Wako   Kenya 4th Attorney General of Kenya (1991-2011) Allegations of "significant" corruption.[58]
Wiranto   Indonesia 5th Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council (since 2019) Human rights violations and suspected war crimes.[59]
Stephen Yaxley-Lennon
(a.k.a. Tommy Robinson)
  United Kingdom Far-right activist Robinson pleaded guilty at Southwark Crown Court to using someone else's passport to travel to the United States in September 2012, and was sentenced in January 2013 to 10 months' imprisonment.[60][61]

Previously banned edit

Individual Nationality Occupation Reason(s) for ban Ban lifted
Lily Allen   United Kingdom Musician Criminal conviction of assaulting a photographer in London in 2007.[62][63] 2008[64][65]
Gerry Adams   United Kingdom Politician, Irish republican president of Sinn Féin Refusing to renounce violence during The Troubles. January 1994; President Bill Clinton, on recommendation from congressional Democrats and the National Security Council (despite opposition from the British government and the State Department), granted Adams a 48-hour visa to attend a conference in New York City to negotiate an IRA truce during the peace process. Adams would visit the U.S. on several further occasions.[66][67][68][69]
Mathangi Arulpragasam (a.k.a. M.I.A.)   United Kingdom Rapper Supporting the Eelam Revolutionary Organisation of Students (EROS), where her father was one of the founders. [70] 2017[71]
Shiro Azuma   Japan Soldier Participation in the Nanjing Massacre.[72] 2006 (deceased)
Fulgencio Batista   Cuba Military officer and politician Human rights violations and committing electoral fraud.[73] 1973 (deceased)
Mike Bailey   Canada Professional wrestler Attempted to enter the country without the correct working visa in place.[74] 2022
Conrad Black   Canada

  United Kingdom

Publisher and businessman Mail fraud and obstruction of justice convictions.[75][76] 2019, after President Donald Trump granted him a presidential pardon.[77][78]
Kurt Blome   West Germany Nazi microbiologist and scientist Involvement with human experimentation in Nazi Germany.[79] 1969 (deceased)
Shane Bunting
(a.k.a. Madchild)
  Canada Rapper Alleged links to the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club.[80][81] 2013[82]
Hortensia Bussi de Allende   Chile Former First Lady of Chile, widow of Salvador Allende Affiliation with Allende and opposition to Chilean military dictatorship; barred from entering in 1983 after an invitation by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco on the basis that "her entry to make various public appearances and speeches has been determined to be prejudicial to U.S. interests".[83] 2009 (deceased)
V. Gordon Childe   Australia Archaeologist Having Marxist beliefs.[84] 1957 (deceased)
Daniel Dumile
(a.k.a. MF Doom)
  United Kingdom Rapper Couldn’t or didn’t prove that he was living in the U.S. prior to 1972, despite records showing he arrived in the country prior to 1972.[85][86][87] 2020 (deceased)
Kyle Falconer   United Kingdom Lead singer for The View Drug-related conviction in the United Kingdom.[88] 2011[89]
Fernando Gabeira   Brazil Former federal deputy for the State of Rio de Janeiro (1995-2011) Considered a terrorist for his role in the kidnapping of American ambassador Charles Burke Elbrick. 2009[90]
Dave Hilton Sr.   Canada Boxer 1961 conviction for drunken driving and assault indictments.[91] 2023 (deceased)
Yusuf Islam
(a.k.a. Cat Stevens)
  United Kingdom Singer Apparent links to terrorism.[92][93][94][95] December 2006
Joseph Kobzon   Russia Singer Allegedly having close associations with drug trafficking, illicit arms trading, and Russian mafia in Moscow. 2018 (deceased)[96][97][98][99][100]
Georg Leibbrandt   West Germany Nazi German bureaucrat and diplomat Participation in the Holocaust 1982 (deceased)[101]
Nelson Mandela   South Africa Revolutionary, anti-apartheid dissident, leader of African National Congress, later first post-apartheid President of South Africa Banned after the apartheid regime of South Africa designated the ANC as a terrorist organization in 1960, requiring Mandela to receive a waiver from the U.S. Secretary of State to visit the United States. 2008, after President George W. Bush signed an act to formally lift it.[102]
Diego Maradona   Argentina Former soccer player and coach Various criminal convictions in Italy, Argentina, Croatia and other countries.[103][104][105] 2020 (deceased)
Gabriel García Márquez   Colombia Novelist and was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1982. Banned from the U.S. due to his ties to the Colombian Communist Party in the 1950s and later for his fondness for Fidel Castro.[106] 1995 by President Bill Clinton, who happened to be an admirer of the writer and would dine with him in 1996.
Nicole Matthews   Canada Professional wrestler Caught using a travel visa instead of a work visa to work independent shows.[107][108] 2023[109]
Narendra Modi   India Former Chief Minister of Gujarat and current Prime Minister of India Involvement in the 2002 Gujarat riots; banned in 2005.[110] 2014, due to diplomatic status per United Nations policy when elected Prime Minister of India.[111][112]
Farley Mowat   Canada Writer and environmentalist Having communist sympathies. 1990[113]
George O'Dowd
(a.k.a. Boy George)
  United Kingdom Singer and fashion designer Criminal convictions in the United States in 2006 and the United Kingdom in 2008.[114][115][116][117] 2014[118]
Alexi Ogando   Dominican Republic Major League Baseball player (relief pitcher) Involvement in an immigration marriage fraud ring in the Dominican Republic between 2004-2005.[119] 2010[120]
Pogo   Australia Electronic music artist/producer Did not have necessary work visa.[121] 2021[122]
Tariq Ramadan    Switzerland Academic, educator and author (Western Muslims and the Future of Islam) Gave money to Hamas. 2010[123]
Hans Joachim Sewering   Germany Doctor and former member of the SS Accused of sending more than 900 disabled patients to their deaths under the Nazi euthanasia program during the Holocaust.[124] 2010 (deceased)
Dobroslav Trnka   Slovakia Lawyer Corruption[125] 2023 (deceased)
Ilija Trojanow   Bulgaria

  Germany

Writer and publisher Undisclosed reasons.[126][127] 2013[128]
Kurt Waldheim   Austria Diplomat and politician, former Secretary-General of the United Nations and President of Austria (1986–1992) Nazi affiliations and activities during World War II, deemed persona non grata.[129] 2007 (deceased)
Amy Winehouse   United Kingdom Singer Drug and assault convictions in the United Kingdom.[130] 2011 (deceased)

See also edit

References edit

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