Yuma Sun

No new threat led to airline laptop limits, officials say

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WASHINGTON — U.S. and British officials said Tuesday the decision to bar laptops and tablets from the cabins of some internatio­nal flights wasn’t based on any specific threat but on longstandi­ng concerns about terrorists targeting jetliners.

Unimpresse­d, some travelers and civil liberties groups denounced the ban, raising concerns that included lost worktime on long flights and worries that checking laptops in baggage will make them more vulnerable to theft.

Under the new bans, electronic devices larger than smartphone­s, such as laptops, tablets and gaming devices, will have to be checked on some internatio­nal flights. American officials announced the U.S. ban early Tuesday, and the British followed later in the day after discussion­s between the countries.

The U.S. ban affects flights from Amman, Jordan; Kuwait City, Kuwait; Cairo; Istanbul; Jeddah and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Casablanca, Morocco; Doha, Qatar, and Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. About 50 flights a day, all on foreign carriers, will be affected. Senior Trump administra­tion officials who briefed reporters about the ban said no U.S.based airlines have nonstop flights from those cities to the U.S.

The British security rules will apply to flights from Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Tunisia and Saudi Arabia.

A U.S. government official said the ban was not prompted by any new or specific threat uncovered in recent days, but rather was based on awareness of continuing terrorist desires to target commercial aircraft. Terrorists are aggressive­ly pursuing new methods to conduct attacks, including smuggling explosives in consumer items, the official said.

That official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss in- ternal government security discussion­s.

The administra­tion officials who spoke to reporters earlier said the security change was the result of “evaluated intelligen­ce.” They noted that an explosion aboard a Daallo Airlines flight in Somalia last year was believed to have been the result of a laptopborn­e bomb. That explosion killed only the suspected bomber.

A British security official also said there have not been, to that official’s knowledge, recent European-directed plots involving such explosive devices. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly about ongoing intelligen­ce operations.

Bennet Waters, principal at the Chertoff Group, a Washington consulting firm, and a former senior official at the Homeland Security Department, said Tuesday that threats to commercial aircraft have been evolving since before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

He said when he was in the government, the threat to aircraft was “very clear, very consistent and it was very persistent.”

The new U.S. and British rules for electronic­s appear to address an evolving threat. The targeted airports are in a region where the terror threat has been elevated for several years.

The 10 airports singled out by the U.S. may have been selected because screening equipment and procedures for carry-on luggage may not be effective enough to detect certain types of nonmetalli­c explosive devices. Waters said screening of checked bags is often more intensive.

Travelers expressed con-

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cerns that the new requiremen­ts would curb their efforts to work on long flights and subject their costly electronic­s to damage or theft.

Banu Akdenizli, an associate professor of communicat­ions at the Doha, Qatar, campus of Northweste­rn University, said she is scheduled to fly to the U.S. in early April for a conference, where she will be a speaker and moderator, in Greensboro, North Carolina. The Turkish native said traveling 17 hours without her laptop will cost her precious time to work and prepare for the conference. She said she’s also worried her computer could be stolen.

“There are massive amounts of data on my computer,” Akdenizli said.

Others expressed doubt about the motives behind the electronic­s ban.

“Given the track record for truthfulne­ss by the Trump administra­tion thus far, I am very doubtful of the underlying claims this policy is based on,” said Morgan Sparks, an Ameri- can fisheries ecologist currently living in Tbilisi, Georgia, who plans to travel to the U.S. in mid-April on a flight connecting in Doha.

The U.S. rules took effect Tuesday, though airlines will have until 3 a.m. EDT Saturday to implement them or face being barred from flying to the United States, the Trump administra­tion officials said. The officials briefed reporters on the condition they not be identified publicly, despite President Donald Trump’s repeated insistence that anonymous sources should not be trusted.

British officials said there is no specific time frame to implement Britain’s new rules and airlines are deciding that question.

Each week, about 94,000 passengers on some 333 flights arrive in the U.S. on trips that will be affected by the device ban, according to the most recent Department of Transporta­tion data. About 36 percent of those affected passengers come from Dubai.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? THIS MAY 8, 2014, FILE PHOTO shows Emirates passenger planes at Dubai airport in United Arab Emirates. The U.S. government is temporaril­y barring passengers on certain flights originatin­g in eight other countries from bringing most types of electronic­s...
ASSOCIATED PRESS THIS MAY 8, 2014, FILE PHOTO shows Emirates passenger planes at Dubai airport in United Arab Emirates. The U.S. government is temporaril­y barring passengers on certain flights originatin­g in eight other countries from bringing most types of electronic­s...
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