Philippine Daily Inquirer

BAN LOOMS ON LAPTOPS IN INTERNATIO­NAL FLIGHTS FROM AND TO US

- —AFP

US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly on Sunday said he was considerin­g banning laptop computers on internatio­nal flights into and out of the country amid signs of “a real threat.”

Kelly made his remarks during the Memorial Day weekend, one of the busiest travel periods in the United States, at a time when the bombing at a concert in Manchester, England, had raised concerns that further attacks—possibly involving explosives packed in electronic devices—may be planned.

“There’s a real threat—numerous threats against aviation,” Kelly said on TV when asked about the likelihood that a wide-reaching ban on large electronic­s in airplane cabins could be imposed.

Terrorists are “obsessed” with the idea of “knocking down an airplane in flight—particular­ly a US carrier, if it’s full of mostly US folks,” the homeland security chief said.

But in another TV interview later, Kelly specified that despite ongoing and persistent concerns, “we have no specific threats right now.”

Disruptive

A laptop ban could disrupt travel between Europe and America.

Some 3,250 flights a week are expected this summer between EU countries and the United States, according to aviation industry figures.

If put in place, a laptop ban would greatly expand on a rule Kelly announced in March banning electronic devices larger than a smart phone from the cabins of flights from 10 airports in the Middle East and North Africa.

The rule affects Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Morocco.

Britain took similar measures in March targeting a smaller list of countries: Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Tunisia and Saudi Arabia.

In Europe last week during President Donald Trump’s nine-day foreign trip, Kelly met with European Commission officials in Brussels to discuss a possible laptop ban in airplane cabins.

 ?? —AP ?? Armed police patrol Manchester City following a suicide bombing that killed more than 20 people at an Ariana Grande concert and sent security officials searching for more antiterror measures that include bans on laptops.
—AP Armed police patrol Manchester City following a suicide bombing that killed more than 20 people at an Ariana Grande concert and sent security officials searching for more antiterror measures that include bans on laptops.

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