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US considering move to expand electronics ban on flights departing the country

The United States is reportedly considering the move to expand the ban on large electronics in airplane cabins to include flights departing from the US to overseas.

India TV News Desk New Delhi Published : May 27, 2017 10:46 IST, Updated : May 27, 2017 10:46 IST
US airways
US airways

The United States is reportedly considering the move to expand the ban on large electronics in airplane cabins to include flights departing from the US to overseas.

According to some media reports, US Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly has confirmed that he is considering such a move.

If that happens, then it would mean any electronic device larger than a cell phone would not be allowed on some flights leaving the US, not just certain inbound US flights, as is currently the case. 

Kelly made the remarks on Friday while he was at the Reagan National Airport in Virginia on Friday.

When asked whether it is true that he has hinted the laptop ban could expand to US soil, Kelly told CNN that those characterisations of his thinking are accurate.

"I would tell you that the threats against passenger aviation worldwide are constant. The good news is that we have great intelligence collection overseas -- US intelligence collection. We also have great sharing with partners overseas. So, we are doing everything we can to get after these threats -- but they are real."

The original ban applies to certain US-bound flights, including those originating in Cairo, Egypt; Dubai and Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; Istanbul, Turkey; Doha, Qatar; Amman, Jordan; Kuwait City; Casablanca, Morocco; and Jeddah and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, reports CNN.

But Kelly had signaled earlier this month that he was looking at possibly expanding the ban due to security concerns.

"The protocol where we put large electronic devices down inside the cargo compartments...I made that decision based on intelligence from a certain part of the world -- sophisticated threats," Kelly said Friday. 

"We are now looking at kind of a worldwide hard look at raising the bar, the minimum bar, on aviation security. So, still contemplating extending the ban, as we work with partners."

"We will make a decision when the time is right", he added.

(With IANS inputs)

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