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US appeals court questions scope of Trump travel ban

Judge asked how the government could take position that a grandmother of a child in the US does not count as a close relationship
The court did not issue a ruling during the hearing (Reuters)

A US appeals court on Monday sharply questioned a lawyer defending President Donald Trump's effort to broadly enforce a temporary refugee ban that the Republican president said was necessary for national security.

At a hearing in Seattle, a three-judge 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals panel also disputed attempts by Justice Department lawyer Hashim Mooppan to argue that grandparents and other relatives of Americans from six Muslim-majority countries should be temporarily barred from travel to the United States.

The latest round in the fight over Trump's travel ban began after the US Supreme Court intervened in June to partially revive it.

The high court said the ban could take effect but that people with a "bona fide relationship" to a US person or entity could not be barred.

The Trump administration interpreted that language to mean the 90-day travel ban would apply to grandparents and some other family members. It also sought to block entry of up to 24,000 refugees who have a connection to a US resettlement agency, for 120 days, arguing that such a relationship is not close enough to warrant protection from Trump's order.

The state of Hawaii challenged that interpretation, and a judge in Honolulu ruled against the Trump administration. The Justice Department appealed to the 9th Circuit.

While that appeal goes forward, the Supreme Court said grandparents and others could be allowed to enter the United States, but that the refugee limits would remain in effect.

About two dozen observers filed into a Seattle courtroom for Monday's hearing, where 9th Circuit Judge Ronald Gould asked how the government could take the position that a grandmother of a child in the United States does not count as a close relationship.

"What universe does that come from?" Gould asked Mooppan.

Mooppan replied by defending the government's position, saying that grandparents are more than one step removed from the immediate family unit.

Another 9th Circuit judge, Richard Paez, questioned why a relationship between a refugee and a resettlement agency is not legitimate. The agency has to develop a specific exchange with the person seeking to move to the country, he noted.

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"They're not just some random person out there," Paez said.

Mooppan, a deputy assistant attorney general, said the resettlement agency has a relationship with the US government, not the refugee directly.

The court did not issue a ruling during the hearing.

Lee Williams, vice president of the US Committee on Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI), a resettlement agency, highlighted in July the suffering caused by the ban on refugees.

The order applies to people from Syria, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Libya.

"For the clients who have been near to coming to the United States through the resettlement programme, many of them may have sold off all of their belongings at the camps... You can imagine the devastation of having been forced to flee your home, living years in a refugee camp with the hope of going, and then all of a sudden being told, 'No, the door is being shut'," Williams told Middle East Eye in July.

The rollout of Trump's current executive order has been more subdued than in January, when Trump first signed a more expansive version. That order, which became known as the "Muslim ban," sparked protests and chaos at airports around the country and the world.

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