A United States federal court has ordered the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to resume processing long-delayed immigration applications, a decision expected to benefit thousands of Nigerians and other foreign nationals caught in administrative backlogs.
The ruling at a glance
The court held that immigration authorities cannot suspend application processing indefinitely, directing USCIS to move forward with pending cases rather than leaving applicants in prolonged uncertainty.
Why Nigerians should care
Although Nigeria was not formally targeted by past U.S. travel restrictions, many Nigerians are among those affected by delays, particularly in:
Employment-based green card categories
Family reunification petitions
Adjustment of status applications within the U.S.
For these applicants, the ruling signals:
A return to active case processing
Possible progress on long-pending residency applications
Renewed timelines for permanent residency and eventual citizenship
Wider impact beyond Nigeria
The decision carries even greater weight for applicants from countries previously affected by restrictive immigration measures, including:
Iran
Somalia
Yemen
Eritrea
Many applicants from these nations had seen their cases effectively frozen. The court’s order now compels authorities to resume decisions on such applications, potentially accelerating family reunifications and residency approvals.
No automatic approvals
Despite the relief, the ruling does not guarantee success for applicants. USCIS will still:
Conduct background and eligibility checks
Approve or deny applications based on existing immigration laws
Backlogs remain a hurdle
Immigration experts caution that while processing will resume, significant backlogs may delay outcomes, meaning applicants could still face waiting periods before final decisions are reached.
The bottom line
For Nigerians and other immigrants, the ruling restores a crucial safeguard: applications must be processed within a reasonable timeframe. After months or years of uncertainty, affected applicants can now expect their cases to move forward—bringing renewed hope for legal residency in the United States.
