8 resultsfor “travel advisory for World Cup visitors to the US”
advisory warning that visitors travelling to the US for the World Cup may face arbitrary
US rights groups urge caution for World Cup visitors **Rights groups have urged fans, players, journalists, and other visitors to this summer's World Cup to "exercise caution" if travelling to the United States.** More
advisory pointed to six areas of risk for those attending the World Cup, calling on “fans, players, journalists, and other visitors to exercise caution and have an emergency contingency plan when travelling to and within
advisory” in April, warning of the “risk of serious rights violations” to fans, players, journalists and other visitors. According to the signatories, people travelling to the US could risk denial of entry and risk
travel advisory [urging visitors to "exercise caution"](/sport/football/articles/ce3d69wngevo) as a result of what it called the government's "violent and abusive immigration crackdown". Tournament organisers have also said they are [worried about](/sport/football/articles/cgrpjzxvx4ko) a long
travel warning](https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/over-120-civil-society-groups-issue-travel-advisory-for-u-s-ahead-of-fifa-world-cup) to the 10 million potential visitors about “serious rights violations” under the current political climate, including “arbitrary denial of entry and risk of arrest, detention and/or deportation”. The world
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) acting Director Todd Lyons confirmed to a committee in the House of Representatives that his agency would be on the ground for World Cup events. When questioned about visitor
visitors in the US for the event. Matches begin on June 11 in cities across the US, Mexico and Canada. ## Concerns over immigration restrictions Critics have said the Trump administration’s hardline policies related