Business World

Turkey anger grows over US electronic­s ban

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ANKARA — Turkey Wednesday stepped up its objections to US restrictio­ns on large electronic devices on flights from some airports in the country and other regional hubs, saying it punished travelers instead of tackling the problem.

“It would be better to take measures together against those who are a threat instead of punishing normal passengers,” Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said during a visit to Washington.

“If there are concerns over security, our department­s should come together and take the necessary measures. This work cannot be done with bans,” Mr. Cavusoglu added, quoted by state-run news agency Anadolu.

Britain and the United States on Tuesday banned laptops and tablet computers from the passenger compartmen­t of flights from Turkey as well as several Middle East and North African nations.

Mr. Cavusoglu stressed these “temporary” measures should instead be replaced by “permanent and the most effective” measures, without giving detail.

“America’s or other allies’ concerns are our concerns,” he added. The US ban affects eight countries including Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Morocco.

His comments come after Turkish Transport Minister Ahmet Arslan said Ankara would ask the US to reverse the ban.

Mr. Arslan sent a letter to his US counterpar­t Elaine Chao, local media reported on Wednesday, in which he urged Ankara and Istanbul airports to be removed from the ruling.

“Turkey adheres to internatio­nal rules on security,” Mr. Arslan wrote, NTV broadcaste­r said.

US officials warned that terrorists are seeking “innovative” ways to attack airliners with smaller explosive devices hidden in consumer electronic­s larger than smartphone­s.

Although no US carriers are affected by the ban, airlines hit include flag-carrier Turkish Airlines, the country’s largest exporter by foreign sales volume, whose profits have already been hit by a series of terror attacks last year.

The British ban affects all the airports in six countries — Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Turkey.

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