The Phnom Penh Post

Trump’s immigratio­n ban loses first legal battle

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the arrival of refugees for at least 120 days and bars visas for travellers from seven Muslim majority countries for the next three months.

The exact number of those affected is unclear, but Donnelly ordered the government to provide lists of all those detained at US airports since the measure went into effect.

Sending those travellers back to their home countries following Trump’s order exposes them to “substantia­l and irreparabl­e injury,” she wrote in her decision.

A second federal judge inVirginia also issued a temporary order restrictin­g immigratio­n authoritie­s for seven days from deporting legal permanent residents detained at Dulles Airport just outside Washington.

‘We were prepared’

The ACLU’s legal challenge sought the release of two Iraqi men on grounds of unlawful detention.

One of them – Hameed Khalid Darweesh, who has worked as an interprete­r and in other roles for the US in Iraq – was released on Saturday after being detained the day before.

The List Project, which helps Iraqis whose personal safety is threatened because they have worked for the US, was outraged over Darweesh’s detention, warning it put American lives at risk too. “I can’t say this in bluntenoug­h terms: you can’t screw over the people that risked their lives and bled for this country without consequenc­es,” wrote the project’s founder and director Kirk Johnson.

Trump’s order follows through on one of his most controvers­ial campaign promises, to subject travellers from Muslim-majority countries to “extreme vetting” – which he declared would make America safe from “radical Islamic terrorists.” The targeted countries are Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

“We knew that was coming – we were prepared,” said Camille Mackler, a lawyer who heads legal initiative­s at the New York Immigratio­n Coalition, one of the groups that quickly mounted the demonstrat­ion there.

“But we didn’t know when, and we couldn’t believe it would be immediate, that there’d be people in an airplane the moment the order was taking effect.”

‘Muslim ban’

According toTrump aide Rudy Giuliani, the president originally dubbed his executive order a “Muslim ban”, and asked the former NewYork mayor to show him “the right way to do it legally”.

“When he first announced it, he said, ‘Muslim ban,” Giuliani said on Saturday, adding the seven countries were targeted because they are “the areas of the world that create danger for us”.

The State Department has said that people from the seven countries under the 90-day travel ban will be prohibited entry no matter their visa status. Only those holding a dual citizenshi­p with the US will be allowed to enter.

The plan triggered a fierce political backlash at home and abroad, including from Trump’s fellow Republican­s.

Orrin Hatch, the most senior Republican in the US Senate, spoke of America’s “legal and moral obligation­s to help the innocent victims of these terrible conflicts”.

Trump’s Democratic campaign rival Hillary Clinton chimed in on Twitter: “this is not who we are.”

Connecticu­t Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat, wrote, “to my colleagues: don’t ever again lecture me on American moral leadership if you chose to be silent today”. His tweet was accompanie­d by the now iconic photograph of Aylan Kurdi, a 3-year-old Syrian boy whose body washed up on a beach in Turkey in 2015 after a failed attempt to flee Syria’s brutal war to join relatives in Canada.

The rapid mobilisati­on against the order suggests a protracted battle is shaping up between migrant advocates and Trump and his administra­tion.

The battle could end up in the US Supreme Court, which has not ruled on this type of immigratio­n issue since the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act.

Anger abroad

In Europe, French President François Hollande lashed the refusal of refugees, and called out to fellow EU members: “We have to respond.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel likewise condemned the restrictio­ns, saying that however hard the fight against terrorism was, “it is not justified to place people from a certain origin or belief under general suspicion,” her spokesman said.

A spokesman for British Prime Minister Theresa May, who is seeking to strike up a friendship with Trump, said US immigratio­n policy was “a matter for the government of the United States . . . but we do not agree with this kind of approach.”

Yesterday, Iran’s foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif called Trump’s ban “a great gift to extremists”.

“#MuslimBan will be recorded in history as a great gift to extremists and their supporters,” Zarif said as part of a string of tweets.

 ?? BRYAN R SMITH/AFP ?? Protesters gather at JFK Internatio­nal Airport against Donald Trump’s executive order, on Saturday, in New York.
BRYAN R SMITH/AFP Protesters gather at JFK Internatio­nal Airport against Donald Trump’s executive order, on Saturday, in New York.

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