Trump travel ban: Targeted nations condemn new US order

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Media caption,

New US travel ban: What's different?

Countries targeted under a new US travel ban passed by President Donald Trump have attacked the move, along with the United Nations.

On Monday, President Trump signed a new executive order placing a 90-day ban on people from six mainly Muslim nations.

The order was presented as a means to strengthen US national security against terror threats.

On Tuesday however, two of the countries, Sudan and Somalia, said the move was unjustified.

The directive, which includes a 120-day ban on all refugees, takes effect on 16 March.

It follows a previous order, which was blocked by a federal court, that sparked confusion at airports and mass protests.

What the order means

  • Citizens of Iran, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen, six of the countries on the original 27 January order, are again subject to a 90-day travel ban

  • Iraq has been taken off the list because its government has boosted visa screening and data sharing, the White House said

  • Refugees already approved by the State Department can enter the US. An indefinite ban on all Syrian refugees is also lifted

  • Green Card holders (legal permanent residents of the US) from the named countries will not be affected

  • Priority is not given to religious minorities, unlike the previous directive

"The fact remains that we are not immune to terrorist threats and that our enemies often use our own freedoms and generosity against us," Department of Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said on Monday.

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Rex Tillerson: "President Trump is exercising his rightful authority to keep our people safe"

Attorney-General Jeff Sessions said there were more than 300 refugees under investigation for potential terror offences, but no further details were given.

He said three of the countries on the list were state sponsors of terrorism and the other three had lost control of territory to militants such as the Islamic State group or al-Qaeda.

The reaction

Not every country on the list has reacted to the new ban yet. Iran previously said it would stick with the ban on US tourists it introduced after the first ban. At the time, Iran called the decision "illegal, illogical and contrary to international rules".

On Tuesday, Somalia's president Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed - a dual US-Somali citizen - expressed his concern over the new ban.

He said the estimated 150,000 Somalis in the US "have contributed to the US economy and the US society in different ways, and we have to talk about what the Somali people have contributed rather than a few people who may cause a problem".

It was critical, he said, that Somalia continue to work to defeat the Islamist militant group al-Shabab. He was speaking at an event with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres addressing Somalia's drought, that poses the risk of famine to five million people.

Sudan's ministry of foreign affairs, meanwhile, spoke of its "deep regret and discontent" that a new ban was issued.

"Sudanese citizens have never been involved in any crimes or terrorism in the United States," the statement went on to say.

Image source, AFP/Getty Images
Image caption,

The new ban led to small protests at US airports - far smaller than the demonstrations after the first ban was announced

The order also leads to a cut in the number of refugees the US has agreed to take in under a resettlement programme - from 110,000 this year to 50,000. The United Nations refugee agency said the US had traditionally been seen as a model of how to treat refugees - and that it was critical that this continue.

"Americans have long played a crucial role in promoting global stability while simultaneously exemplifying the highest humanitarian ideals," the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said.

"This is the gold standard in refugee protection and a powerful model for all countries," he added. "At a time of record-high levels of forced human displacement, this kind of humane leadership is needed more than ever."

Media caption,

Meet the Arab American family divided over Trump