The National - News

Hawaii to challenge ‘Muslim ban 2.0’

US Pacific state is first to launch lawsuit against restrictio­ns on travellers from six nations signed by president on Monday

- Rob Crilly Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae With additional reporting by Associated Press

NEW YORK // Hawaii became the first US state to file a lawsuit against president Donald Trump’s amended travel ban, saying it discrimina­tes against Muslims, divides families and harms tourism.

The state’s attorney general said there was fundamenta­lly no difference between the revised ban, signed on Monday, and the original that was overturned by judges after mass protests and more than two dozen legal challenges.

The new restrictio­ns take effect on March 16. Travellers from six countries – Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen – will be banned for 90 days and the entire refugee programme will be halted for 120 days.

Iraq was the seventh country on the list in the original ban, but was dropped after American politician­s said it punished Iraqis who worked for the US armed forces and risked alienating a key ally in the fight against ISIL.

Another key difference is that this time, those already holding visas or green cards – which give foreign citizens permanent residency in the US – will be exempt from the ban.

Although the amended ban is designed to avoid the travel chaos of the first order when travellers were detained at airports and deported, Hawaii attorney general Douglas Chin described it as a “Muslim ban 2.0”.

“Hawaii is special in that it has always been non-discrimina­tory in both its history and constituti­on,” he said.

Mr Chin said that the islands remember with regret what happened during the Second World War when Japanese-Americans were interned in camps, one of which was located in Hawaii.

The latest lawsuit was lodged by lawyers acting for Hawaii and for Ismail Elshikh, an imam who says his Syrian mother-in-law and family will not be allowed to visit once the ban begins.

“President Trump’s executive order is subjecting a portion of Hawaii’s population, including Dr Elshikh, his family, and members of his mosque, to discrimina­tion and second-class treatment, in violation of the constituti­on and the immigratio­n and nationalit­y act,” reads the suit, which was filed on Tuesday.

“The order denies them their right to associate with family overseas on the basis of their religion and national origin.”

It also claims Hawaii universiti­es and its economy will suffer if they cannot recruit freely from overseas population­s.

Hakim Ouansafi, president of the Muslim Associatio­n of Hawaii, said there was no evidence that banning people from certain countries would make the United States safer.

“This is again discrimina­ting against six countries or seven and doesn’t make it right,” he said.

US district court judge Derrick Watson on Wednesday approved the motion, giving Hawaii the go-ahead to proceed with its case. The state and the federal government must now submit their written arguments to the district court for a March 15 hearing. At the hearing, the state will argue that the judge should issue a temporary stay on the travel ban to prevent it from taking effect until the lawsuit has been resolved. Opponents elsewhere – including the American Civil Liberties Union and civil rights groups in Michigan – said they were also preparing to launch challenges.

Legal experts said the revisions may help Mr Trump avoid some of the most egregious harms of the original order, but they do nothing to avoid the charge that it was motivated by bias against Muslims. The delay before the new ban’s implementa­tion also suggested there was no imminent threat to national security.

Margo Schlanger, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School who is also working on a challenge, said: “The very major hardship that the last version imposed on people and the chaos introduced when it was implemente­d, all of that made it more vulnerable to attack than this one.

“This case is less of a slam dunk than the last one, but the major underlying constituti­onal claim is that this ban was motivated against Muslims and there’s nothing in the new ban that makes this any less true.”

‘ Hawaii is special in that it has always been non-discrimina­tory in both its history and constituti­on Douglas Chin Hawaii attorney general

 ?? Audrey McAvoy / AP Photo ?? Attorney general Doug Chin said the Aloha State was defending its constituti­on with the legal challenge.
Audrey McAvoy / AP Photo Attorney general Doug Chin said the Aloha State was defending its constituti­on with the legal challenge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates