Oman Daily Observer

US Supreme Court keeps tight refugee ban in place

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WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court kept the Trump administra­tion’s strict refugee ban in place on Monday, at least temporaril­y dashing the hopes of some 24,000 already-approved immigrants.

Justices of the highest court in the land accepted the administra­tion’s emergency petition to stay a ruling by the San Francisco Appeals Court last week that would have allowed thousands of refugees already in the pipeline to come to the United States despite the ban.

That put the broader legal challenges to the travel ban — which halts all refugees and travellers from six mostly Muslim countries — off until an expected Supreme Court review on October 10.

The court, however, left the door open for opponents of the ban to file their arguments against it by midday Tuesday, paving the way for yet another reversal on the status of possible refugee arrivals.

On September 8, the San Francisco court upheld a ruling against the travel ban, saying that refugees who have formal assurances of resettleme­nt in the United States from refugees assistance agencies are not covered by the ban.

The ruling would have taken affect on Tuesday, reopening the door to 24,000 people left in limbo by President Donald Trump’s onagain off-again travel ban.

The Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to place that decision on hold until the high court can review broader issues of the travel ban next month.

It argued that the appeals court’s ruling “would upend the status quo and do far greater harm to the national interest.”

The arguments hinged on a stipulatio­n in the travel ban that refugees in the pipeline can only be accepted if they have a “bona fide relationsh­ip” with a US individual or entity. The government said formal assurances from a refugee agency that may not have had direct, personal contacts with the refugee were not covered in that exception.

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