Khaleej Times

EU hits out at religious, racial bigotry

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brussels — The European Union delivered a tacit rebuke on Monday to US President Donald Trump over his new travel bans, but diplomats said harsher criticism was unlikely due to internal divisions among EU member states.

In his most far-reaching action since taking office on January 20, Trump last Friday put a fourmonth hold on allowing refugees into the United States and temporaril­y banned travellers from seven Muslim nations.

The action, which resulted in legal US residents also being turned away at airports, drew strong criticism from rights groups, foreign leaders and others.

The EU’s foreign policy chief, Italy’s Federica Mogherini, said Europe would continue to work closely with countries across the Muslim world and to help refugees from the region.

“In Europe, we have a history that has taught us that ... you might end up being in a prison if you build all the walls around you,” said Mogherini when asked about Trump’s action.

“The EU will continue to work... with all the countries of the region regardless of their religion.”

Trump’s ban covers citizens of Syria, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. He says the ban will help keep Americans safe and he has cited recent attacks by Islamist militants in several European countries.

A spokesman for the European Commission said lawyers were analysing Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n to see whether it would affect Europeans, adding that this was not yet clear.

“This is the European Union and in the European Union we do not discrimina­te on the basis of nationalit­y, race or religion,” said the spokesman, Margaritis Schinas.

But achieving unity among the EU’s 28 member states on Trump’s travel ban is likely to prove difficult, especially given the rise of antiMuslim, far-right parties in France, the Netherland­s and elsewhere.

The speed of Trump’s announceme­nts since taking office and his use of Twitter to communi- cate directly with supporters have also wrongfoote­d the EU, with its cumbersome decision-making machinery.

“Even if we arrive at a common stance, there is a group of EU states that would not sign anything too critical of the United States,” said one diplomat in Brussels.

A second diplomat also said the trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip required delicate handling.

“There is the problem of the speed at which he Tweets and how the EU works, how quickly we can react. And the general mood is of great caution.

It’s a new situation in which we could end up preaching to the United States as we would normally do to a third-world country,” the diplomat added.

While some EU officials and citizens see Trump’s ban as discrimilo­ndon natory and xenophobic, the EU is currently also working to curb the flow of migrants and refugees to its soil after the uncontroll­ed arrival of some 1.5 million people in 2015-2016.

Though the EU measures on curbing immigratio­n fall well short of Trump’s travel bans, member states such as Hungary and Bulgaria have built new border fences to try to keep out migrants and refugees.

Trump is part of a three-pronged attempt to undermine the European Union, Guy Verhofstad­t, one of the EU’s top officials and its chief Brexit negotiator, said.

The other two threats were from extremsits and from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who Verhofstad­t said was also working against the progress of the European Unon project. —

Only 109 people out of 325,000 were detained and held for questionin­g. Big problems at airports were caused by Delta computer outage ... protesters and the tears of Senator (Chuck) Schumer.

 ?? — AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors protest President Trump’s executive immigratio­n ban at O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago, Illinois.
— AFP Demonstrat­ors protest President Trump’s executive immigratio­n ban at O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago, Illinois.
 ??  ?? Donald Trump US President
Donald Trump US President

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