Visas Are Privileges, Not Rights': US Defends Soyinka's Visa Revocation
The Consulate further requested Soyinka to bring his visa to the Lagos Embassy “for physical cancellation,” a request the Nobel laureate described as humorous, asking if anyone in the audience would volunteer to deliver it on his behalf.
“If you have plans to travel to the United States, you must apply again to re-establish your qualifications for a new non-immigrant visa,” the letter, issued by the NIV Section of the Consulate, added.
Soyinka’s visa was issued on April 2, 2024, in Lagos, according to the letter.
Best known as a playwright, Soyinka won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986. He had lived abroad, primarily in the US, for a long time, where he held professorships at several universities, according to The Nobel Prize.
Soyinka’s visa revocation has sparked fresh conversations about recent steps taken by the US to curb migrant influx into the country, especially from Africa.
“If you have plans to travel to the United States, you must apply again to re-establish your qualifications for a new non-immigrant visa,” the letter, issued by the NIV Section of the Consulate, added.
Soyinka’s visa was issued on April 2, 2024, in Lagos, according to the letter.
Best known as a playwright, Soyinka won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986. He had lived abroad, primarily in the US, for a long time, where he held professorships at several universities, according to The Nobel Prize.
Soyinka’s visa revocation has sparked fresh conversations about recent steps taken by the US to curb migrant influx into the country, especially from Africa.
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