US Tells Foreigners to Return Home Before Applying for Green Cards
The United States has flipped the script on how foreigners can apply for permanent residency. Under a new policy by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), anyone residing in the US temporarily — as a tourist, student, or business visitor — must now return to their home country before applying for a Green Card.
For Nigerians, this is direct and unambiguous: no more processing of a permanentresidency application from within American borders. Nigerian immigrants are now expected to pack their bags, fly back to Lagos, Abuja, or wherever they call home, and start the process from a US embassy or consulate on Nigerian soil.
The USCIS frames this as fixing a gap in the system. In its words, the policy ensures that immigration functions "as the law intended instead of incentivising loopholes." The agency also says officers can now assess each application individually rather than processing everyone under a blanket rule, which sounds reasonable until you consider who gets caught in the net.
Vulnerable People Are Not Exempt
Refugee groups have already flagged a serious problem. Trafficking survivors, abused children, and migrants who fled dangerous situations are not carved out of this policy.
For someone who left their country specifically because it was unsafe to stay, being told to return there to apply for US residency is not a bureaucratic inconvenience. It is a direct threat.
The USCIS has not addressed this clearly. The efficiency argument does not hold when efficiency is being used to explain away the risk to people with nowhere safe to go back to.
This Is Part of a Larger Pattern
The Green Card rule does not exist in isolation. Over the past year, the US has rolled out a series of immigration restrictions that have hit Nigerians particularly hard.
Non-immigrant visas for Nigerian citizens were changed to single-entry and capped at three months. Visa applicants are now required to submit their social media usernames for the past five years.
Students, vocational learners, and exchange visitors applying for F, M, and J visas are now subject to social media vetting as part of identity screening.
Each of these moves individually might be explained away as policy refinement. Taken together, they form a consistent picture: the United States is raising the bar for who gets in and who gets to stay.
What This Means for Nigerians Now
If you are a Nigerian in the US without a Green Card, the window to adjust your status from inside the country has effectively closed under this policy. The path forward runs through home.
That is the reality. Whether the policy ultimately holds up legally or gets challenged remains to be seen. But for now, the message from Washington is clear enough: if you want to stay permanently, leave first.
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