Emirates changes pilot, crew rosters on US flights
The ban applies to pilots, flight attendants, even though all flight crew who are not US citizens
DUBAI: Emirates airline has changed pilot and flight attendant rosters on flights to the United States following the sudden US travel ban on seven Muslim-majority countries, but it said US flights continue to operate to schedule.
The world’s largest long-haul carrier, who flies daily to 11 US cities, has made “the necessary adjustments to our crewing, to comply with the latest requirements,” an Emirates spokeswoman told Reuters by email on Sunday.
President Donald Trump on Friday temporarily suspended the entry of people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. The decision caught airlines off guard, according to the International Air Transport Association.
The ban applies to flight attendants from pilots and the seven countries, even though all flight crew who are not US citizens already need a special visa to enter the country.
Another Emirates spokeswoman said the impact of the ban on operations would be minimal. The airline employs over 23,000 flight attendants and about 4,000 pilots from around the world, including the United States, Europe and the Middle East.
Meanwhile, an Etihad Airways spokesman said the airline has “taken steps to ensure there will be no issues for flights departing over the coming weeks.”
But amid confusion over enforcing the ban, it is unclear if the ban applies to dual nationals - those who hold one passport from a country on the list and another from a non-US country that is not.
Etihad said on its website that dual citizens could travel to the US using their non-banned passport.
IATA have told its members that the ban does not apply to dual nationals if they have a passport not on the list.
However, the Guardian reported on Saturday, quoting State Department officials, that dual nationals were banned.
Meanwhile, the head of the Arab League expressed “deep concern” Sunday about President Donald Trump’s restrictions on citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries entering the United States.
The new regulations “are unjustified restrictions on the entry of citizens of several Arab nations to the US, in addition to the consequences of suspending the acceptance of Syrian refugees,” Ahmed Aboul Gheit said in a statement.
Aboul Gheit said he hoped the US administration would “review its position because of the negative consequences this could lead to in terms of preserving family unity and the continuation of dialogue between Arab societies and American society”.
Such dialogue includes “the fields of education and scientific research”, his statement said. — Reuters