Deccan Chronicle

Europe furious over Trump travel ban

Officials say the trans-Atlantic embargo will wound economies reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic

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Brussels, March 12: European officials reacted with surprise and anger on Thursday after US President Donald Trump imposed a trans-Atlantic travel ban they fear will wound economies already reeling from the covid-19 pandemic. Trump closed US arrivals to travellers from the Schengen border-free zone — which does not include Britain and Ireland — in what he said was an “aggressive” effort to contain the spread of the often deadly disease.

But European leaders argue that their scientific advice suggests travel restrictio­ns are ineffectiv­e when the virus is already present almost worldwide, and lamented that they had not been consulted. “The covid-19 is a global crisis, not limited to any continent, and it requires cooperatio­n rather than unilateral action,” EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel said.

“The European Union disapprove­s of the fact that the US decision to impose a travel ban was taken unilateral­ly and without consultati­on,” the presidents of the European Commission and European Council said. “The European Union is taking strong action to limit the spread of the virus,” they insisted. Earlier, Michel had made it clear that what Brussels fears most is the economic hit from the ban, and he promised that EU experts would meet quickly.

“Economic disruption must be avoided,” he said. The Schengen zone includes most EU member states along with Iceland, Liechtenst­ein, Norway and Switzerlan­d — but not Britain, Ireland, Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria or Cyprus. Trump said the ban on travellers from the zone would come into effect at midnight Friday, and would not affect US citizens returning from Europe.

Trump briefly caused alarm as he announced that a “tremendous amount of trade and cargo” would also be banned, forcing officials to clarify the measures would apply only to humans, not goods. Despite the White House walking back this threat, the travel ban itself could hit airlines, travel firms and global businesses hard, and Asian and European markets plummeted on the news. In Brussels, European officials and diplomats were furious. “If he wants the EU to be the culprit, so be it. It's erratic, unilateral and creates a lot of problems that are unnecessar­y,” one envoy fumed.

“Trump is simply kicking a man when he’s down. He wants to appear to be in control, but in seven days it will be clear that he is not,” he said, referring to the spread of the disease in America. “This is going to be serious. What airlines will still exist when this is all over?”

Even Britain, which has left the EU and is itself exempt from Trump’s ban for now, expressed concern. “With regard to flight bans, we are always guided by the science as we make our decisions here,” finance minister Rishi Sunak told BBC radio. “The advice we are getting is that there isn’t evidence that interventi­ons like closing borders or travel bans are going to have a material effect on the spread of the infection.”

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