The US authorities have rolled back a controversial
travel ban on people from seven mainly Muslim countries after a judge suspended
it. The state department said it was reversing the
cancellations of visas, 60,000 of which were revoked after President Donald
Trump's order.
Judge James Robart ruled there were legal grounds to
challenge the ban.Mr Trump called the verdict by the Seattle judge "ridiculous" and vowed to restore the ban.
People affected by the ban treated news of the suspension warily as airlines began allowing them to board flights to America on Saturday.
Judge Robart's temporary restraining order on Friday halted the ban with immediate effect.
Since then, the state department has said it is reversing visa cancellations and US homeland security employees have been told by their department to comply with the ruling.
Customs officials told airlines that they could resume boarding banned travellers. Qatar Airways, Air France, Etihad Airways, Lufthansa and others said they would do so.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration argues that the
travel ban is designed to protect the US.
It has promised to seek "at the earliest
possible time" an emergency stay that would restore the restrictions.
"I am very happy that we are going to travel
today," Fuad Sharef, an Iraqi with an immigration visa who was prevented
along with his family from boarding a flight to New York a week ago, told
Reuters news agency from Irbil on Saturday. "Finally, we made it."
A cardiologist training in the US, who wished to
remain anonymous, told BBC News
his Syrian wife had recently joined him but people in her situation would not
"take the risk of leaving the country in case things change back
again". Among those standing to benefit most from the suspension of the ban is four-month-old Fatemeh Reshad, an Iranian infant with a heart defect who will now receive life-saving surgery in the US after all.
US doctors have pledged to treat her for free, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said. .
Huge protests greeted the ban in the US, where
demonstrators swamped airports to convey their message that America still
welcomed refugees.
In London on Saturday, protesters converged on the
US embassy in Grosvenor Square to vent their anger over Mr Trump's policies. Smaller protest rallies were also held in Paris and
Berlin.Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson argued the ban was unconstitutional.
"Folks who had visas, folks who were allowed to travel were denied that right without any due process whatsoever - that's un-American and unconstitutional," he told the BBC.
Washington Solicitor General Noah Purcell said the focus of his state's legal challenge was the way the president's order targeted Islam.
Courts in at least four other states - Virginia, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan - are also hearing cases challenging Mr Trump's executive order.
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