"This is a very confusing and contradictory state to be in," Pedram, a 33-year-old doctor, told AFP today, speaking by phone from the transit lounge at Schiphol airport.
He and the five others -- a PhD student, and two married couples heading to visit their children and grandchildren in the United States -- have been left stunned by President Donald Trump's executive order blocking entry to citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran.
"When we set off from Tehran nothing was said about Trump's new rules. They gave me a boarding pass and everything was OK," said another of the group, a 29-year PhD student, who asked to remain anonymous.
But when he landed at Schiphol airport on Saturday he had to go through another security check and was pulled to one side.
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An officer from the US immigration services "told me that I no longer had the allowance to go into the country," he said, adding he was embarrassed by the whole ordeal.
He spent an estimated USD 2,000 to get his visa, which took him several months and trips to Dubai and Armenia to secure. His return flight home was booked for October.
The small group were strangers before, but with no visas to enter the EU they have spent three nights together stuck in limbo, sleeping on sofas and chairs in the airport's transit lounge.