A US appeals court has posed tough
questions at those challenging and defending President Donald Trump's
controversial travel ban.
The order banned entry for all refugees and visitors from seven mainly Muslim nations, until it was halted last week.
The
three-judge panel raised questions over the limits on the president's
power and Mr Trump's evidence to link the seven countries to terrorism.
But it also asked whether the measure could be considered anti-Muslim.
A
decision from the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, in San Francisco, is
expected later this week. Whatever it decides, the case will probably
end up in the Supreme Court.
What did the two sides argue at the appeals court?
There was an hour of oral arguments from both sides on Tuesday.
The Justice Department was first to make its case, urging the appeal judges to reinstate the banning order.
Lawyer August Flentje said Congress had authorised the president to control who can enter the country.
When
asked to point to evidence that the seven countries affected - Iran,
Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen - present a risk to the US,
he said a number of Somalis in the US had been connected to the
al-Shabab group.
Then a lawyer representing Washington state told the court that halting the executive order had not harmed the US government.
Solicitor
General Noah Purcell said the ban had affected thousands of residents
of the state, with students delayed as they tried to come to Washington
and others prevented from visiting family abroad.
A Muslim ban or not?
The
final minutes of the hearing were spent on whether the travel ban
amounted to a shut-out for Muslims, which would be unconstitutional.
Judge Richard Clifton asked both sides on the issue, pointing out it
affected only 15% of the world's Muslims.
A 15-page brief issued
by the Justice Department on Monday night argued the executive order was
"neutral with respect to religion".
But in court on Tuesday, Mr
Purcell cited Mr Trump's campaign statements about a Muslim ban. He also
pointed to statements made by one of the president's advisers, Rudy
Giuliani, who said he was asked to come up with a way of making a Muslim
ban work legally.
Mr Clifton also said the seven countries
included in the band were identified by the Obama administration and
Congress as deserving of visa restrictions, based on a terror threat.
He asked: "Do you assert that that decision by the previous administration and Congress as religiously motivated?"
No,
Mr Purcell answered, but President Trump had called for a complete ban
and although this was not a complete ban, it was discriminatory.
What did the executive order do?
Its main components were:
- nationals from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen - even those with visas - banned from entering the US;
- a temporary ban on all refugee admissions;
- the reprioritisation of minority religion (interpreted to mean Christian) refugee claims;
- a ban on all Syrian refugees;
- a cap on total annual refugee admissions to the US of 50,000.
It came into force on 27 January and caused some confusion at US
and foreign airports because people were stopped from boarding planes
or prevented from entering the US, and sent home.
There was strong condemnation and it was halted last Friday by a federal judge in Washington state.
As a result, people from the seven countries with valid visas were able to travel to the US again.
Washington
state, Minnesota and other states want the appeals court in San
Francisco to permit the temporary restraining order to stand as their
lawsuit works its way through the courts.
Polls suggest that US public opinion is sharply divided on the issue.
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