The US State Department announced that it was stopping all visits for the people of Gaza.
The stagnation was “released in recent times to complete and fully review the process and processes used to release a small number of temporary medical-human visas,” the agency said on X.
The decision has condemned some Palestinian rights groups.
Palestine Children Relief Fund said in a statement that the decision “Gaza will have a devastating and irreversible impact on our ability to bring injured and seriously sick children in the United States for lifetime medical treatment.”
After the policy innings of the State Department, the right activist Laura Lumor urged a series of posts on X to criticize the visa program and “stop this hatred” from the Trump administration.
In later posts on the X Saturday, the Lumor took credit for the shift and thanked the state secretary Marco Rubio for temporarily stopping the visa.
Palestinian Children Relief Fund says that it has extracted 169 children from Gaza in 2024 as part of his treatment foreign program, bringing them to care for the Middle East, Europe, South Africa and America.
Two and a half years in a war after Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, Gaza has damaged his medical infrastructure and has now faced a shortage of dramatic food.
Humanitarian groups have alleged that an Israeli blockade starting in March has prevented non-governmental organizations from giving adequate food in Gaza. The Israeli government says that its rules on assistance are aimed at preventing food from taking food by Hamas.
Un-supported food safety organizations, human groups and journalists reporting within Gaza have warned of famine in Gaza.
In late July, the BBC International News Outlets Angnes France-Press, Associated Press, and Reuters joined the Reuters, warning to issue a public statement that reporters in Gaza faced starvation.
Outlets wrote, “For several months, these independent journalists Gaza have the world’s eyes and ears on the ground. They are now facing the same strict circumstances that they are covering.”
In July, US President Donald Trump said Gaza had “real starvation”, but his administration remains concrete behind Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.