Manawatu Standard

Hawaiian lawsuit halts new travel ban

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UNITED STATES: Hours before President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban was set to go into effect, a US federal judge in Hawaii yesterday issued an emergency halt to the order’s implementa­tion.

The action was the latest legal blow to the administra­tion’s efforts to temporaril­y ban refugees as well as travellers from six predominan­tly Muslim countries.

The new ban, signed by the president on March 6, had aimed to overcome legal problems with a January executive order that caused chaos at airports and sparked mass protests before a Washington judge stopped its enforcemen­t in February.

US District Judge Derrick Watson put an emergency stop to the new order in response to a lawsuit filed by the state of Hawaii, which argued that the order discrimina­ted against Muslims in violation of the US Constituti­on. Trump has said the policy is critical for national security and does not discrimina­te against any religion.

Watson concluded in his ruling that while the order did not mention Islam by name, ‘‘a reasonable, objective observer ... would conclude that the Executive Order was issued with a purpose to disfavour a particular religion’’. Watson was appointed to the bench by former Democratic president Barack Obama.

Trump said the judge’s legal block ‘‘makes us look weak’’ and represente­d ‘‘unpreceden­ted judicial overreach’’, speaking at a rally in Nashville, Tennessee. He said he would take the case ‘‘as far as it needs to go’’ including to the Supreme Court.

Paul Ryan, the Republican Speaker of the US House of Representa­tives, said the ban was needed to improve vetting of people entering the United States and he had no doubt that it would be upheld by higher courts. Reuters

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