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Version 8 Version 9
Updates: Response to Trump’s Travel Ban Updates: Response to Trump’s Travel Ban
(30 minutes later)
• A federal judge blocked the part of President Trump’s ban that covers refugees and other foreign nationals who are being held at American airports.• A federal judge blocked the part of President Trump’s ban that covers refugees and other foreign nationals who are being held at American airports.
• The White House seemed to changed course and said that green card holders will not be barred.• The White House seemed to changed course and said that green card holders will not be barred.
• Protests against the ban continue across the country today.• Protests against the ban continue across the country today.
People gathered to protest the ban at more than 40 airports and town squares across the country. At airports and town squares, in the shadow of the White House and on the lawns of state capitals, tens of thousands of Americans chanted and shouted their opposition to the Trump administration’s travel ban and their solidarity with refugees and Muslims at more than 40 protests across the country. New York Times correspondents are sending dispatches from many of them.
• New York: “Are you ready to fight for the values of this city and this country?” Mayor Bill de Blasio asked at Battery Park. A roar of “Yes!” came back from the thousands gathered.• New York: “Are you ready to fight for the values of this city and this country?” Mayor Bill de Blasio asked at Battery Park. A roar of “Yes!” came back from the thousands gathered.
Rehana Hashmi, 56, a human rights advocate from Pakistan, had traveled to New York from Ottawa to join the protest. “My heart is bleeding” she said. “I feel degraded.”Rehana Hashmi, 56, a human rights advocate from Pakistan, had traveled to New York from Ottawa to join the protest. “My heart is bleeding” she said. “I feel degraded.”
Demonstrators also returned to Kennedy Airport, though in smaller numbers than the thousands who gathered there on Saturday night. — TALYA MINSBERG AND JONATHAN WOLFEDemonstrators also returned to Kennedy Airport, though in smaller numbers than the thousands who gathered there on Saturday night. — TALYA MINSBERG AND JONATHAN WOLFE
• Washington: Protesters gathered outside the White House in Lafayette Park to show their disapproval of the president’s executive order. One woman, a visual artist from Yemen who is working in the United States on a green card, held a sign that read, “I spit in Trump’s hummus” and wore a red, white and blue scarf around her head. — NICHOLAS FANDOS• Washington: Protesters gathered outside the White House in Lafayette Park to show their disapproval of the president’s executive order. One woman, a visual artist from Yemen who is working in the United States on a green card, held a sign that read, “I spit in Trump’s hummus” and wore a red, white and blue scarf around her head. — NICHOLAS FANDOS
• Boston: A young woman in Copley Square held a sign that read: “Dear Donald. Me again. Marching for my immigrant husband and my Muslim friends. Back off! Claire.” Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, issued a statement saying that he was discussing with members of the academic, medical and research sectors here on how to minimize the risks that a ban on immigrants and refugees poses to their institutions. — KATHARINE Q. SEELYE• Boston: A young woman in Copley Square held a sign that read: “Dear Donald. Me again. Marching for my immigrant husband and my Muslim friends. Back off! Claire.” Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, issued a statement saying that he was discussing with members of the academic, medical and research sectors here on how to minimize the risks that a ban on immigrants and refugees poses to their institutions. — KATHARINE Q. SEELYE
• Dallas: Hundreds of protesters at the Dallas/Fort Worth airport’s international terminal passed around pizza and cookies, while children bent over poster boards and markers on the floor, making signs. Lawyers said that nine people from Iran, Iraq, Sudan and Syria were still detained at midday, and that those being held had immigrant or tourist visas. — PATRICK McGEE• Dallas: Hundreds of protesters at the Dallas/Fort Worth airport’s international terminal passed around pizza and cookies, while children bent over poster boards and markers on the floor, making signs. Lawyers said that nine people from Iran, Iraq, Sudan and Syria were still detained at midday, and that those being held had immigrant or tourist visas. — PATRICK McGEE
Democratic members of the House and the Senate will gather on the steps of the Supreme Court on Monday evening to protest the travel ban, said Nancy Pelosi of California, the House minority leader.Democratic members of the House and the Senate will gather on the steps of the Supreme Court on Monday evening to protest the travel ban, said Nancy Pelosi of California, the House minority leader.
“The president’s action is not only unconstitutional but immoral,” she said in a statement.“The president’s action is not only unconstitutional but immoral,” she said in a statement.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York said that his office would offer legal help to those detained at airports in New York.Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York said that his office would offer legal help to those detained at airports in New York.
“We have directed the Port Authority and my counsel’s office to make sure we are protecting the legal rights of any person detained at any of our airports, period,” the governor, a Democrat, said at a news conference. “We will serve as counsel for any detainee who needs legal assistance.”“We have directed the Port Authority and my counsel’s office to make sure we are protecting the legal rights of any person detained at any of our airports, period,” the governor, a Democrat, said at a news conference. “We will serve as counsel for any detainee who needs legal assistance.”
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey operates Kennedy and La Guardia Airports.The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey operates Kennedy and La Guardia Airports.
Travelers being held at Kennedy Airport continued to be released on Sunday.Travelers being held at Kennedy Airport continued to be released on Sunday.
Around noon, a 76-year-old Sudanese man, Yassin Abdelrhman, was embraced by his son, Mohammed Suliman, 37, to cheers from onlookers that included a scrum of pro bono lawyers. Yassin Abdelrhman, 76, was embraced by his son, Mohammed Suliman, 37, to cheers from onlookers that included a scrum of pro bono lawyers on Sunday. Mr. Suliman, a British citizen, had traveled to Sudan to bring his father to the United States. But while Mr. Suliman was allowed to enter the country, his father had been detained since 8 a.m. on Saturday. “I am so tired,” Mr. Suliman said. “It has been a long journey.” His father did not speak. RUTH BASHINSKY
Mr. Suliman, a British citizen, had traveled to Sudan to bring his father to the United States. But while Mr. Suliman was allowed to enter the country, his father had been detained since 8 a.m. on Saturday. Mr. Suliman said his father had a green card, and on Sunday the White House said it would allow in green card holders from restricted countries. Vahideh Rasekhi, a Ph.D. student studying linguistics at Stony Brook University, hugged friends who greeted her as she walked out of terminal 4 after being detained since flying into Kennedy Airport at 1:45 p.m. on Saturday from Iran. When asked if she felt angry being detained she said, “I don’t feel angry right now. I am so happy it’s done.” RUTH BASHINSKY
“I am so tired,” Mr. Suliman said. “It has been a long journey.” His father did not speak. Haider Alshawi, 33, who also had been detained at Kennedy Airport for nearly 24 hours, was greeted by his wife and 7-year-old son in Houston on Sunday. “I’m still scared,” he said. “I’m wondering if there’s anybody waiting for me outside to grab me back again.” He is a Baghdad-born Iraqi refugee whose relatives worked for the United States government in Iraq. He lived in Stockholm for more than a year while waiting for approval to come to America and join his wife, son and other relatives in the Houston area. MANNY FERNANDEZ
A New York City congressman, Hakeem Jeffires, said that at least seven people were still being held at Kennedy Airport. RUTH BASHINSKY Notwithstanding the protests across the country, many Americans strongly support the president’s travel ban.
It was really happening: Haider Alshawi’s flight had landed in Houston, and there he was at Bush airport on Sunday morning, in the bright, crowded corridors of the Terminal C baggage claim area, hugging and kissing his wife and his 7-year-old son. His ordeal as one of the first refugees caught up in President Trump’s executive-order on immigration was over. Billy Bearden, who works in an auto-part factory in Carrollton, Ga., said he was “glad and thankful” that President Trump was making a “serious effort to vet these individuals.”
But Mr. Alshawi, 33, was still worried. He had been detained at Kennedy Airport in New York for nearly 24 hours until his lawyers and public pressure helped set him free on Saturday. Mr. Bearden, 52, said on Sunday that he was sympathetic to the circumstances of people living in war-torn countries, but that he couldn’t shake the fear of another terrorist attack, like those in Boston, Orlando and San Bernardino, Calif..
“I’m still scared,” he said. “I’m wondering if there’s anybody waiting for me outside to grab me back again.” “Sadly, for whatever reason, it seems that the majority of terrorists worldwide seem to be of the Muslim faith,” he said, adding: “The mad rush to bring them in at all costs actually is not a good thing. If it turns out that they are decent, peace loving individuals, then certainly I got no problem with them, even living on my street.”
Mr. Alshawi is one of the two named plaintiffs in the legal case that prompted a federal judge to halt enforcement of Mr. Trump’s temporary ban on refugees entering the United States. He is a Baghdad-born Iraqi refugee whose relatives worked for the United States government in Iraq and whose brother-in-law was killed in a car-bomb blast in Baghdad in 2010. On Long Island, Kathleen Ganci, the widow of the highest ranking New York City Fire Department official killed on Sept. 11, held a similar view.
He lived in Stockholm for more than a year while waiting for approval to come to America and join his wife, son and other relatives in the Houston area. He was on an airplane en route from Stockholm to New York on Friday when the president signed the order. Upon landing in New York, he was detained and prevented from catching his connecting flight to Houston. “Do I want them banned forever? Of course not, said Ms. Ganci, whose husband, Chief of Department Peter J. Ganci Jr., was crushed in the collapse of 1 World Trade Center. “There’s many, many fine Muslim people in this world, but there’s many many people who want to kill us, and we need to vet them, and we need to find out.”
“This is the best moment ever,” he said, clutching his son’s stuffed animal toy at the baggage carousel. “It’s been three years I’ve been waiting for this moment. Brand new life with the family.” MANNY FERNANDEZ She added: “We should be wiser and smarter, and I think we haven’t been over the last eight years we’re so idealistic not necessarily the people affected, but the people who aren’t affected. Walk in my shoes, is my point. You can’t just let people into this country because you have a big heart.” CAITLIN DICKERSON and ANDY NEWMAN
While several members of New York’s congressional delegation have been involved in helping travelers detained at Kennedy, one Republican legislator, Lee Zeldin, said he supported Mr. Trump’s executive order.
“Every American has sympathy for the innocent person who is looking to come to America for a better life, but the process must without exception prioritize America’s national security first,” Mr. Zeldin, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee who represents parts of Long Island, said in a statement.
“We cannot allow someone entry until we know for sure they will not pose a risk,” he said. “The ultimate humanitarian victory is to assist with efforts to stabilize these nations and eliminate the threats there to peace.” — DIEGO RIBADENEIRA
Mo Farah, the Olympic gold-medal runner who was born in Somalia, grew up in Britain and has lived in the United States for six years, took to Facebook to criticize the president’s ban:Mo Farah, the Olympic gold-medal runner who was born in Somalia, grew up in Britain and has lived in the United States for six years, took to Facebook to criticize the president’s ban:
“On 1st January this year, Her Majesty The Queen made me a Knight of the Realm,” he wrote. “On 27th January, President Donald Trump seems to have made me an alien.”“On 1st January this year, Her Majesty The Queen made me a Knight of the Realm,” he wrote. “On 27th January, President Donald Trump seems to have made me an alien.”
Mr. Farah, who won gold medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters, and who lives in Oregon, continued:Mr. Farah, who won gold medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters, and who lives in Oregon, continued:
The president’s executive order bars visitors from seven predominantly Muslim countries, including Somalia. It is unclear whether the travel ban applies to Mr. Farah.The president’s executive order bars visitors from seven predominantly Muslim countries, including Somalia. It is unclear whether the travel ban applies to Mr. Farah.
The ban could have a major effect on international sports.The ban could have a major effect on international sports.
The ride-hailing app Uber on Saturday was drawn into the conflict over Mr. Trump’s executive order after the company told its customers that surge pricing had been turned off at Kennedy Airport, where protesters had gathered.The ride-hailing app Uber on Saturday was drawn into the conflict over Mr. Trump’s executive order after the company told its customers that surge pricing had been turned off at Kennedy Airport, where protesters had gathered.
Some interpreted the alert, which was issued over the company’s Twitter account, as an attempt to attract business after the New York Taxi Workers’ Alliance announced a one-hour work stoppage to protest Mr. Trump’s order.Some interpreted the alert, which was issued over the company’s Twitter account, as an attempt to attract business after the New York Taxi Workers’ Alliance announced a one-hour work stoppage to protest Mr. Trump’s order.
Uber quickly clarified, saying that the announcement was not meant to affect the strike. In a statement, the company’s chief executive, Travis Kalanick, said that drivers outside the United States affected by the ban would be compensated by Uber for three months. The statement did not specify what that compensation would be.Uber quickly clarified, saying that the announcement was not meant to affect the strike. In a statement, the company’s chief executive, Travis Kalanick, said that drivers outside the United States affected by the ban would be compensated by Uber for three months. The statement did not specify what that compensation would be.
Despite Mr. Kalanick’s efforts, however, the battle lines had already been drawn. A social media campaign calling for users to delete the Uber app from their cellphones was soon underway.Despite Mr. Kalanick’s efforts, however, the battle lines had already been drawn. A social media campaign calling for users to delete the Uber app from their cellphones was soon underway.
Using the hashtag #deleteuber, Twitter users posted screenshots of their phones as they deleted their apps. By Sunday, Uber’s competitor Lyft, perhaps sensing an opportunity, announced in a letter to customers that it had donated $1 million to the American Civil Liberties Union.Using the hashtag #deleteuber, Twitter users posted screenshots of their phones as they deleted their apps. By Sunday, Uber’s competitor Lyft, perhaps sensing an opportunity, announced in a letter to customers that it had donated $1 million to the American Civil Liberties Union.
And even as Uber said it was not responding to the move by taxi drivers, some came to the company’s defense. Roger Stone, a longtime Republican operative and a political adviser to Mr. Trump, posted on Twitter in support of Uber, calling the protests “manufactured outrage.”And even as Uber said it was not responding to the move by taxi drivers, some came to the company’s defense. Roger Stone, a longtime Republican operative and a political adviser to Mr. Trump, posted on Twitter in support of Uber, calling the protests “manufactured outrage.”
— JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH— JONAH ENGEL BROMWICH
While several members of New York’s congressional delegation have been involved in helping travelers detained at Kennedy Airport, one Republican Congressman, Lee Zeldin, said he supported Mr. Trump’s executive order.
“Every American has sympathy for the innocent person who is looking to come to America for a better life, but the process must without exception prioritize America’s national security first,” Mr. Zeldin, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee who represents parts of Long Island, said in a statement.
“We cannot allow someone entry until we know for sure they will not pose a risk,” he said. “The ultimate humanitarian victory is to assist with efforts to stabilize these nations and eliminate the threats there to peace.” — DIEGO RIBADENEIRA
The president took to Twitter this morning to justify his order giving priority to Christian refugees from mostly Muslim countries. That provision has been criticized from across the religious spectrum, including by Christian leaders.The president took to Twitter this morning to justify his order giving priority to Christian refugees from mostly Muslim countries. That provision has been criticized from across the religious spectrum, including by Christian leaders.