Hawaii judge extends order blocking Trump travel ban
NEW TRAVEL BAN. In this file photo, Tareq Aquel Mohammed Aziz holds travel documents after arriving from Yemen at Dulles International airport on February 6, 2017 in Washington, DC. File photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images/AFP
LOS ANGELES, USA (UPDATED) – The US federal judge in Hawaii who halted President Donald Trump's revised travel ban has extended his order blocking its implementation.
US District Judge Derrick Watson in Hawaii said Wednesday, March 29, he had turned his original temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction.
Such an injunction generally has no set expiration date, said Hawaii state Attorney General Doug Chin.
This means Trump will be barred from enforcing the ban while it is contested in court.
Watson's first order suspending enforcement of Trump's amended ban was issued March 15, a day before the measure, which barred entry of people from 6 mainly Muslim countries, was to go into effect.
Trump's first ban and the revised one have both been criticized as amounting to a ban on entry of Muslims into the US.
In his first order, Watson ruled it was plausible "to conclude that targeting these countries likewise targets Islam" given their Muslim populations ranging from 90.7 percent to 99.8 percent.
Trump has said a travel ban is needed to preserve US national security and keep out extremists. – Rappler.com