Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Laptop ban: Fliers express frustratio­n

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Travellers across the Middle East expressed frustratio­n on Wednesday at a ban on large electronic devices for flights to the United States and Britain that has sparked confusion and speculatio­n.

From Saturday, passengers on flights to the United States and Britain from major hubs in Turkey and the Arab world will have to check in any device larger than a smartphone, including laptops and tablets.

The United States and Britain have cited intelligen­ce indicating passenger jets could be targeted via explosives planted in electronic devices.

Caught in the middle of the ban are thousands of travellers growing increasing­ly frustrated with what they see as an absurd measure.

“Is there anything else I should know before flying back home? Navy blue boxers not allowed? Should I shave?” asked an American expat who is living in Abu Dhabi and who has a direct flight to the United States next week.

As the March 25 enforcemen­t deadline looms, passengers are growing increasing­ly wary of restrictio­ns on living in and travelling from the Middle East.

“They took my laptop and my camera,” said Mustafa, who did not give his second name, as he boarded a plane out of Dubai to the United States.

The US ban affects nine airlines from eight countries: Turkey, Morocco, Jordan, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

The British ban, meanwhile, targets flights out of Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Lebanon. AFP

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