As someone who has worked on national security vetting, the Trump Admin barring Somali referee Omar Artan entry to the US for the World Cup leads to more questions than answers.
Omar was vetted, approved, and issued a visa.
Then he landed in the United States and was suddenly deemed a national security threat.
So which is it?
Either the system failed, or someone changed the rules after the fact.
That's not how serious national security decisions should be made.
The public deserves to know what changed.
@clarabazel254 Are they grown in Kenya? I remember some years back reading how Kenya exported more than Tz at one time and yet according to the article, Kenya had no single tree
@Kimuzi_ Are there really, or are we talking to those who have resigned to fate that they can't be multimillionaires/billionaires......and they are many.
I don't think most people are fully grasping what happened to Omar Artan. Citizens of African countries cannot travel to the US without first navigating a highly restrictive, discriminatory visa process. Africans face the highest refusal rates globally, not only for US visas +
@K24Tv@MombasaCountyKe This is nonsense, and you know it too. You can't talk of urban mobility while the provision for side walks is almost non-existent.
@maxmius You first inaccurate observation is that lawyers exist to table facts.Far from it. That's the purview of (experts) witnesses. Lawyers are there to advance persuasive arguments. Secondly , to represent yourself in court- pro se, you don't need to be a lawyer.
@_fels1 Performative outrage is so annoying.If by the way, the deceased was his friend as he claims, what support did he give to alleviate his problem....I mean, he should have taken 125k down to 25k. Here he is with his fake outrage and moral indignation.Chieth.