China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hawaii extends court order blocking travel ban

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HONOLULU — A federal judge in Hawaii indefinite­ly extended on Wednesday an order blocking enforcemen­t of US President Donald Trump’s revised ban on travel to the United States from six predominan­tly Muslim countries.

US District Judge Derrick Watson turned an earlier temporary restrainin­g order into a preliminar­y injunction in a lawsuit brought by the state of Hawaii challengin­g Trump’s travel directive as unconstitu­tional religious discrimina­tion.

Trump signed the new ban on March 6 in a bid to overcome legal problems with a January executive order that caused chaos at airports and sparked mass protests before a Washington judge stopped its enforcemen­t in February. Trump has said the travel ban is needed for national security.

In its challenge to the travel ban, Hawaii claims its state universiti­es would be harmed by the order because they would have trouble recruiting students and faculty.

It also said the island state’s economy would be hit by a decline in tourism.

The court papers cite reports that travel to the US “took a nosedive” Trump’s actions.

The state was joined by a new plaintiff named Ismail Elshikh, an US citizen from Egypt who is an imam at the Muslim Associatio­n of Hawaii and whose mother-inlaw lives in Syria, according to the lawsuit.

Hawaii and other opponents of the ban claim that the motivation behind it is based on religion and Trump’s election campaign promise of “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States”.

“The court will not crawl into a corner, pull the shut- after ters closed, and pretend it has not seen what it has,” Watson said on Wednesday.

Watson wrote that his decision to grant the preliminar­y injunction was based on the likelihood that the state would succeed in proving that the travel ban violated the US Constituti­on’s religious freedom protection.

Trump has vowed to take the case to the US Supreme Court, which is split 4-4 between liberals and conservati­ves with the president’s pick — appeals court judge Neil Gorsuch — still awaiting confirmati­on.

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