Arab News

US action is a unilateral move, says Turkish foreign minister

-

DUBAI: Travelers across the Middle East expressed frustratio­n Wednesday at a ban on large electronic devices for flights to the US and Britain that has sparked confusion and speculatio­n.

From Saturday, passengers on flights to the US 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. Caught in the middle of the ban are thousands of travelers 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 living in Abu Dhabi with a direct flight to the US next week.

As the March 25 enforcemen­t deadline looms, passengers are growing increasing­ly wary of restrictio­ns on living in and traveling 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 US.

At the Tunis airport, a passenger flying to Canada via London said he was confused by the new measure.

“I mind because I need my laptop or my iPad. It’s a personal thing. Why do I have to put them in hold?” said Riadh, 33, adding he now feared they would be damaged or stolen.

In Lebanon, another traveler named Riad, an IT worker in his 50s, said he would copy his laptop hard drive before flying to London next week in case it disappeare­d or was damaged in transit.

“It’s a hassle. Why don’t they just turn the laptop on — or the tablet — as usual and put it through the machine?“

Many were quick to flag a lack of logic behind justificat­ions of the ban.

“Every criminal in the Middle East: ‘Oh no! We can’t take the direct flight to the US! I hate connecting flights! *Cancels criminal plans*,” Egyptian analyst Mohamed El-Dahshan wrote on Twitter.

Ankara has said it plans on requesting that the US repeal the measure.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu criticized the ban as a unilateral, temporary move better replaced by “permanent” measures.

The British ban has sparked concern in tourism-dependant Tunisia, which is trying to recover from 2015 jihadist attacks that killed holidaymak­ers.

“It will have a negative impact on tourism,” said Mohamed Ali Toumi, the head of a Tunisian travel agents federation.

American officials have publicly cited security concerns.

“From what we know, the ban is linked to intelligen­ce on Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula gathered by the US military,” said Mustafa Alani, a security analyst at the Dubai-based Gulf Research Center.

The US has conducted intense air raids on AQAP targets across Yemen since January. The Pentagon has confirmed 40 strikes this month.

But experts do not rule out other motives behind the ban, including business lost to increasing­ly popular Gulf carriers Emirates, Etihad and Qatar Airways.

US airlines do not have direct flights from the airports affected by its new restrictio­ns.

“American airlines are going to benefit simply because airlines make their business from the business travelers, so on these long flights that are in excess of eight or 12 hours, time is money — but there are definitely more pressing considerat­ions linked to security,” said aviation analyst Kyle Bailey, president of the US-based consultanc­y KL Bailey Associates.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia