TRENDING
PFIPC: No legal or factual basis to demand Gbajabiamila’s resignation — Jiti Ogunye • NPFL: Ojokojo appointed Kwara United chief coach • Afenyo‑Markin Calls for Legal Literacy Among Emerging Leaders at Legal Edge Summit • School abduction: Oyo Govt don’t need UN to probe incident – Adewole Adebayo • President Ruto's official website down in second suspected hack within a year • ‘It’s political fight back’ – Sam Amadi on war against corruption in Nigeria • Hart, Rooney and Richards on rowing the Hudson and if Tuchel should keep his job • Gianni Infantino unlikely to face IOC sanctions over Balogun red card scandal • FG Targets 25 Million Tonnes Annual Grain Output • Badejo-Okusanya takes early lead in NBA presidential poll • APC has no opposition in Ondo, senator boasts • Timi Dakolo denies £4,106 debt claim, threatens legal action against DJ • NBA election: Badejo-Okusanya takes early lead in presidential poll • Kano Empowers 1,900 Butchers, To Establish Cottage Industry Hubs • PCRC to mobilise 10,000 volunteers for Safe Schools Initiative • Bayelsa CP hails Diri’s skills programme for reducing crime • Nigeria taps banks, local capital to close $171bn climate finance gap • Goodie, last of Ibru brothers reveals family’s untold story • RCCG cleric calls for overhaul of Nigeria’s democracy, cost-cutting measures • Prioritise competence in fiscal reforms, experts urge FG • PFIPC: No legal or factual basis to demand Gbajabiamila’s resignation — Jiti Ogunye • NPFL: Ojokojo appointed Kwara United chief coach • Afenyo‑Markin Calls for Legal Literacy Among Emerging Leaders at Legal Edge Summit • School abduction: Oyo Govt don’t need UN to probe incident – Adewole Adebayo • President Ruto's official website down in second suspected hack within a year • ‘It’s political fight back’ – Sam Amadi on war against corruption in Nigeria • Hart, Rooney and Richards on rowing the Hudson and if Tuchel should keep his job • Gianni Infantino unlikely to face IOC sanctions over Balogun red card scandal • FG Targets 25 Million Tonnes Annual Grain Output • Badejo-Okusanya takes early lead in NBA presidential poll • APC has no opposition in Ondo, senator boasts • Timi Dakolo denies £4,106 debt claim, threatens legal action against DJ • NBA election: Badejo-Okusanya takes early lead in presidential poll • Kano Empowers 1,900 Butchers, To Establish Cottage Industry Hubs • PCRC to mobilise 10,000 volunteers for Safe Schools Initiative • Bayelsa CP hails Diri’s skills programme for reducing crime • Nigeria taps banks, local capital to close $171bn climate finance gap • Goodie, last of Ibru brothers reveals family’s untold story • RCCG cleric calls for overhaul of Nigeria’s democracy, cost-cutting measures • Prioritise competence in fiscal reforms, experts urge FG
Full List: US places 23 countries on highest ‘Do Not Travel’ alert
Back to Home

Full List: US places 23 countries on highest ‘Do Not Travel’ alert

Vanguard Nigeria about 1 hour 2 mins read
Full List: US places 23 countries on highest ‘Do Not Travel’ alert

The United States Department of State has updated its global travel guidance, placing 23 countries under its highest travel warning, Level 4, advising American citizens not to visit the listed destinations under any circumstances.

In the revised advisory published on Thursday and seen on Saturday via the department’s TravelGov X account, the US government explained that a Level 4 designation applies to countries where security conditions pose serious risks or where its ability to provide assistance to American citizens is severely limited.

“We issue Travel Advisories with Levels 1–4. Level 4 means DO NOT TRAVEL. We assign Level 4 based on local conditions and/or our limited ability to help Americans there,” the department said.

It added, “These places are dangerous. Do not go for ANY reason.”

Among the countries placed under the highest advisory are 11 African nations: Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Libya, Mali, Niger, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda.

The complete list of countries designated as Level 4 includes Afghanistan, Belarus, Burkina Faso, Burma (Myanmar), Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Mali, Niger, North Korea, Russia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Uganda, Ukraine and Yemen.

The latest update comes months after the State Department maintained Nigeria under Level 3, urging Americans to reconsider travel to the country, while classifying several Nigerian states under the more severe Level 4 advisory because of ongoing security concerns.

The states designated as Level 4 in northern Nigeria are Borno, Jigawa, Kogi, Kwara, Niger, Plateau, Taraba, Yobe and northern Adamawa.

In the South-South and South-East, the advisory applies to Abia, Anambra, Bayelsa, Delta, Enugu, Imo and Rivers State, excluding Port Harcourt.

According to the State Department, Americans should reconsider travel to Nigeria due to crime, terrorism, kidnapping, civil unrest and inconsistent healthcare services, while travel to the listed Level 4 states is strongly discouraged.

The Nigerian government, however, dismissed the US assessment, describing it as a standard precaution based on Washington’s internal procedures rather than a reflection of the country’s overall security situation.

The post Full List: US places 23 countries on highest ‘Do Not Travel’ alert appeared first on Vanguard News.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Tourism

View All

Art & Culture

View All

Lifestyle

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.