Kenyans living in the US have been spared from a crackdown that President Donald Trump ordered on people who have overstayed their welcome in the country.
Family seeks answers on son’s death as he is cremated in the US: A family is seeking the government’s help investigate the death of their son in the US.Moses Maima (pictured), 50, is said to have committed suicide in Chicago and was quickly cremated even as the family waited for the body to be brought home for burial.
Love for beer cans earns Kenyan man approval in US: During this merrymaking season, garbage collectors are at full throttle, with discarded beer and soft drinks cans among their principal cluster.
An American PE firm is in the country scouting for wealthy Kenyans to invest their way into an American citizenship through the US immigrant investor visa programme.
The US has deported 104 Kenyans between 2017 and early 2018.The data is contained in the latest update of America's Immigration and Customs Enforcement Detainees and dated December 2017.
At least 67 Kenyans are detained in the US over immigration and customs misconduct.Data released by America's Immigration and Customs Enforcement Detainees in June shows that 14 Kenyans are inmates in Texas, seven in Georgia
Kenyan officials and business leaders moved quickly to capitalise on the daily non-stop service between New York and Nairobi that was inaugurated on Sunday.
The Trump Administration intends to crack down on F-1 students and J-1 exchange visitors who violate the terms of their status. Under a new policy, effective August 9, 2018, even a minor, unintentional violation could trigger “unlawful presence.”