Houston Chronicle

U.S. lifts laptop ban on planes entering country

- By Micah Maidenberg NEW YORK TIMES

The laptop ban is over. Passengers flying into the United States from airports in 10 Muslim-majority countries affected by the ban may now take their laptops and other large electronic devices into the cabin with them, the Department of Homeland Security confirmed Thursday.

Security officials imposed the ban in March, warning then that the Islamic State group was developing bombs that could be hidden in portable electronic devices. But the airlines and airports affected by the ban have all complied with the initial phase of the new Homeland Security standards, allowing the prohibitio­n to be lifted, the department said.

The ban on portable devices created a headache for carriers flying into the United States from the affected airports. Many airline passengers expect to use laptops and tablets as a matter of course, for both entertainm­ent and to get work done. Analysts feared it would reduce the number of people visiting the United States from the 10 countries, which stretched from North Africa to the Mideast and into Turkey.

The commercial aviation industry expressed alarm after security officials said in May that they were considerin­g expanding the ban to all flights to the United States from Europe, a huge market for both leisure and business travelers.

Instead of carrying out that broader ban, John Kelly, Homeland Security secretary, announced last month that there would be new security standards for carriers flying into the United States. The first phase of those new rules required airports with carriers flying to U.S. destinatio­ns to quickly demonstrat­e that they had the ability to screen passengers for trace amounts of explosives.

More than 280 airports — including the 10 targeted by the original laptop ban — complied with that rule, officials said Thursday.

“The quick and decisive action taken by airlines, nations and stakeholde­rs are a testament to our shared commitment to raising the bar on global aviation security,” said David Lapan, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security.

The ban originally applied to airports in Amman, Jordan; Cairo; Istanbul; Jidda and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia; Kuwait City; Casablanca, Morocco; Doha, Qatar; and Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.

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