Updated, Thursday, July 27, 2017, 4:45 p.m. ET — The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has lifted the ban of onboard large electronic devices for all 10 airports listed in the initial ban, according to spokesman David Lapan. The latest airports to be relieved are those in Cairo, Egypt; Casablanca, Morocco; and Riyadh and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. In addition, all 180 airlines and 280 airports with a last point of departure into the U.S. have implemented the first phase of enhanced security measures announced last month, he tweeted.
Both the U.S. and U.K. governments are banning passengers
from bringing laptops, tablets and other electronic devices onboard flights
from certain countries in the Middle East and Africa.
The U.S. ban affects 10 airports: the home airports of all
three Gulf carriers—Hamad International Airport in Doha, Dubai International
Airport and Abu Dhabi International Airport—as well as Ataturk International
Airport in Istanbul, Kuwait International Airport, Cairo International Airport,
Queen Alia International Airport in Amman, King Abdulaziz International Airport
in Jeddah, King Khalid Airport in Riyadh and Mohammed V International Airport
in Casablanca. Under the new rule, passengers must place any electronic device
larger than a smartphone into checked baggage, with an exception only for
approved medical devices, which also will require additional screening. The restrictions
do not affect flights returning from the U.S. to those airports.
The U.K., meanwhile, has issued a similar ban on
electronics—specifying dimensions of 16 centimeters by 9.3 centimeters by 1.5 centimeters—aboard flights
from Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Tunisia, according to a
statement from Secretary of State for Transport Chris Grayling. Published
reports indicate that Canada could be considering a similar policy.
In a blog post, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the
stringent measures are based on intelligence related to "terrorists'
ongoing interest in targeting commercial aviation," citing airport attacks
in Brussels and Istanbul and the downing of Russia's Metrojet Flight 9268 over
Egypt in 2015 and the attempted downing of a Daallo Airlines flight over
Somalia last year. "Evaluated intelligence indicates that terrorist groups
continue to target commercial aviation, to include smuggling explosive devices
in various consumer items," according to the DHS.
The DHS did not give a time frame for the length of the ban,
saying it "will remain in place until the threat changes" and that
more airports could be added. Both Emirates and Etihad said they will begin
enforcing the ban on Friday, and Emirates said it will be in effect until Oct
14. Qatar Airways already is enforcing it and "has made special
arrangements to assist passengers in securing their devices in the aircraft's
baggage hold," according to the carrier. Turkish Airways is enforcing the
ban, according to a message to passengers.
Royal Jordanian, which in a tweet
on Monday indicated the ban would affect both flights to and from the U.S.,
has since deleted that tweet and said further updates would be announced soon.
In terms of the U.K. ban, British Airways already is
advising passengers traveling from the six listed countries to check electronic
devices. The carrier also noted that passengers traveling from those countries
likely will be called to the boarding gate earlier than usual.
Industry Reaction
The restriction is eliciting concern from the travel
community, as it will be a considerable hindrance for corporate travelers
traveling from and connecting through those airports. Global Business Travel
Association executive director and COO Michael McCormick in a statement said
that, while the U.S. Transportation Security Administration should "take all necessary steps" to ensure
aviation safety, GBTA also is waiting to hear whether it addresses
a specific security threat and is talking to members to assess the business
travel impact. "Nearly half of business travelers prefer to stay
connected and get work done while flying," he said. "Not allowing
them to bring their devices on the plane cuts productivity, taking time away
that they can be getting business done. Many business travelers also prefer to
keep their devices close for security purposes because they may contain
sensitive company information."
Association of Corporate Travel Executives executive
director Greeley Koch offered more pointed criticism of the restrictions,
saying they made "no sense," and expressed concern that they could
become wider reaching. "How long will it be before this ban is extended to
flights from Paris and Brussels into the U.K. and U.S.?" Koch wondered. "No one is going to willingly check their computers or tablets,
which often host the most detailed and proprietary corporate information, into
the cargo hold of an airliner. Baggage goes missing every day. Can you imagine
the consequences of losing a week's or a month's work, plus your confidential
corporate data to a luggage theft?"
For corporations dealing with travel through those airports,
iJet International airline safety analyst Max Leitschuh suggested travel buyers
check with airlines to determine what sort of insurance policies they have on
lost luggage. Those who do not wish to check their electronics could consider
rerouting through a country that does not have the ban.
The U.S. Travel Association chided the U.S. government for
the communication around the policy, with some even within the TSA not having
been briefed on the policy as news about emerged on Monday,
according to The New York Times. "Even with security as a justification,
it does not absolve authorities of the responsibility to communicate,"
according to USTA VP for public affairs Jonathan
Grella.
Effectiveness in
Question
On a broader scale, the bans are drawing questions based on
their effectiveness. Turkish Transport Minister Ahmet Arslan already has called
for "reverse steps," saying it offers no benefits to passengers,
according to the BBC.
Nicholas Weaver, a UC Berkeley International Computer
Science Institute researcher, told BTN
a laptop bomb would be just as dangerous in the cargo hold as it would
onboard. If the concern is onboard hacking, that could be accomplished with a
mobile phone as easily as with a computer, Weaver said. The DHS said it is not
banning mobile phones "to balance risk with impacts to the traveling
public."
Weaver also questioned the effectiveness of limiting the ban
to certain airports, saying it made no sense unless it also included all other
airports that connect to those airports. "The problem with an
administration that has so burnt its credibility in hundreds of ways, including
crying 'national security' to justify the blatantly bigoted intent behind the
first travel ban, is that even if there is some reason, there is doubt,"
Weaver said.
Leitschuh said the fact that the U.K. and U.S. have
implemented similar measures makes it less likely that the motivations were
more political than security oriented, but he added that there were still
inconsistencies, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Kuwait appearing
in the U.S. ban but not the U.K. ban. Additionally, none of the attacks cited
by the DHS would have been prevented by these measures, he said.
In fact, the ban even increases one danger to passengers. "The ban will increase the number of lithium-ion
batteries being transported in cargo holds," Leitschuh said. "A
lithium-ion battery fire in the cargo hold is much harder to contain and
extinguish than in the passenger cabin."