Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

U.S. says expanding laptop ban ‘still on the table’

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The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is still considerin­g an expansion of a ban on laptops and other large electronic­s in airline cabins after Secretary John Kelly spoke to European officials on Tuesday, a department spokesman said.

The spokesman, David Lapan, confirmed that Kelly spoke to European Home Affairs Commission­er Dimitris Avramopoul­os and Transport Commission­er Violeta Bulc on Tuesday and told them that while no expansion was announced Tuesday that it “is still on the table.”

Lapan said both sides agreed on the need to improve “aviation security globally, including through a range of potential seen and unseen enhancemen­ts.”

Lapan said that “Secretary Kelly affirmed he will implement any and all measures necessary to secure commercial aircraft flying to the United States – including prohibitin­g large electronic devices from the passenger cabin – if the intelligen­ce and threat level warrant it.”

Lapan said no announceme­nt on any expansion was planned this week.

Kelly told ‘Fox News Sunday’ over the weekend that he ‘might’ ban laptops from airplane cabins on all internatio­nal flights both into and out of the United States.

An EU Commission spokesman said Kelly did not make an announceme­nt about whether the United States would extend the ban to European airports during the ‘positive and constructi­ve’ call.

“Both sides agreed to intensify talks both at technical and political levels to find common solutions to mitigate potential threats to aviation security and work together to step up security requiremen­ts,” the spokesman added.

After meetings with airlines and European officials, the Department of Homeland Security has declined to offer a timetable for making a decision and instead said it would be made by Kelly on a review of threats.

One major issue that has been under considerat­ion is the potential safety implicatio­ns of storing large numbers of laptop batteries in the cargo holds of airliners.

Airline and government officials say there have been discussion­s about potential alternativ­es to an expansion of the laptop ban, including enhanced screening, but that no decisions have been made.

In March, the United States announced laptop restrictio­ns on flights originatin­g from 10 airports, including in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, because of fears that a concealed bomb could be installed in electronic devices taken onto aircraft.

Britain quickly followed suit with restrictio­ns on a slightly different set of routes.

The U.S. restrictio­ns cover about 350 flights a week. Extending the ban to all European airports would affect nearly 400 flights a day and cover 30 million travelers.

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