US charity: Halt in visitor visas for Gazans will harm wounded kids seeking treatment

The State Department said it will halt all visitor visas for Gazans while it conducts a 'thorough review,' following false claims by far-right conspiracists.
The US has issued 3,800 B1/B2 visitor visas for Palestinians seeking medical treatment in the country in 2025 [Getty/file photo]

US-based charity HEAL Palestine and other rights groups criticised the State Department's decision to stop visitor visas for Palestinians from Gaza, saying it will harm wounded children seeking medical treatment on short-term US visas.

The State Department said on Saturday it was halting all visitor visas for Palestinians from Gaza while it conducted "a full and thorough" review, after far-right conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer said Palestinian refugees were entering the US.

HEAL Palestine said there was no refugee resettlement programme as stated by Loomer and that the group's efforts were part of a medical treatment programme. It also said the programme was run on donations and did not use US government money.

The charity sponsored and brought "severely injured children to the US on temporary visas for essential medical treatment not available at home," it said in a statement. "After their treatment is complete, the children and any
accompanying family members return to the Middle East."

The US has issued more than 3,800 B1/B2 visitor visas, which permit foreigners to seek medical treatment in the US,
to holders of Palestinian Authority travel documents so far in 2025. That figure includes 640 visas issued in May.

The Palestinian Authority issues travel documents to residents of the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza. The State Department said a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas were issued to people from Gaza in
recent days but did not provide a figure.

The Council on American Islamic Relations and the Palestine Children's Relief Fund condemned the decision to stop the visas. Loomer told The New York Times she spoke to Secretary of State Marco Rubio to warn about what she called a threat from "Islamic invaders." Rubio said the government was evaluating the process of granting such visas after concerns by some members of Congress regarding alleged ties to extremism. He claimed their offices had
presented evidence of such ties but he gave no details.

Gaza has been devastated by Israel's military assault, which has killed more than 62,000 Palestinians, caused a hunger crisis, and prompted genocide and war crimes accusations at international courts.