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[Dunia] Dilarang membawa peralatan elektronik(cabin) ke US sekiranya terbang dari airpor

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Post time 21-3-2017 08:57 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Airline electronics ban: What you need to know





Large electronics banned from cabins on some flights


Flying direct to the U.S. from major airports in the Middle East and North Africa just got a lot more complicated.

The Trump administration has ordered nine airlines to stop passengers from bringing most types of electronic devices into the cabin for U.S.-bound flights. Instead, they'll have to check them in.


The sudden move, attributed to concerns about potential terrorist attacks, creates a new headache for airline staff and passengers.

Here are the key things to know:


Which airports are involved?

The 10 airports covered by the ban include major global hubs such as Dubai.




The full list:

Cairo
Egypt
Dubai and Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
Istanbul
Doha, Qatar
Amman, Jordan
Kuwait City
Casablanca, Morocco
Jeddah and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia


Which airlines are affected?

The nine airlines that operate direct flights to the U.S. from those airports are


Egyptair
Emirates Airline
Etihad Airways
Kuwait Airways
Qatar Airways
Royal Air Maroc
Royal Jordanian Airlines
Saudi Arabian Airlines
Turkish Airlines

U.S. airlines are not affected because none of them fly from the airports in question to the U.S., according to U.S. government officials.

Passengers will still be allowed to take electronic devices onto flights departing from the U.S.

Are you impacted by the electronics ban? WhatsApp or iMessage us at +1-347-322-0415


Which devices are banned?

Passengers will have to check in any electronic devices bigger than a smartphone. That includes laptops, cameras, gaming devices and tablets such as iPads.

Medical devices required during the flight will still be allowed in the cabin after security screening.




When will it take effect?

The U.S. government officially notified the airlines at 3 a.m. ET Tuesday. They have 96 hours to fully comply.

And if they don't? "We will work with the FAA to pull their certificate and they will not be allowed to fly to the United States," one senior U.S. official said.

What are the airlines saying?

Turkish Airlines told passengers traveling to the U.S. that anything bigger than a smartphone must be checked in.

Emirates said it would implement the new measures for all passengers bound for the U.S. from Dubai on March 25.

Etihad said it had received the notification from the U.S. government and was reviewing it. A spokeswoman for Qatar Airways said it would take full advantage of the 96-hour notice period and implement the change on Friday.

Other airlines, including Royal Jordanian and Saudi Arabian Airlines, have said they will implement the measures.


What's the reason for the ban?

U.S. officials say the move is a response to fears that terrorist groups may target passenger planes by smuggling explosive devices in consumer goods.

One official said there's no specific plot authorities are aware of, but the U.S. has been considering such a ban for some time.

Why these airports?

The U.S. is especially concerned about the 10 airports in question, the official said, because of screening issues and the possibility of terrorists infiltrating authorized airport personnel.

Flight and cabin crews are not covered by the new restrictions.

Officials said that they believe a threat to the U.S. would be negated if a passenger transferred through a secondary city with additional and more trustworthy screening procedures.

Isn't it dangerous to put electronic devices in checked baggage?

Safety experts and regulators have long warned that batteries shipped in bulk could constitute a fire risk that ultimately could bring down an aircraft. The International Civil Aviation Organization advised global regulators last year to ban carrying bulk shipments of such batteries in the cargo holds of passenger jets.


But electronics spread out across a person's luggage pose far less of a threat than palettes of lithium batteries, according to a U.S. aviation official.

-- Rene Marsh, Isil Sariyuce in Istanbul and John Defterios in Abu Dhabi contributed to this report.







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Post time 21-3-2017 09:53 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Aduhai, delay la flights untuk 3,4 arini
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Post time 21-3-2017 10:10 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Sib bek negaraku xde dlm senarai
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Post time 22-3-2017 02:04 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Nasibla dapat presiden yg pengecut..dan paranoid.


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Post time 22-3-2017 02:13 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Tidak bebaloi mati di tangan ummah delusional
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Post time 22-3-2017 02:22 AM | Show all posts
Edited by Peterpan17 at 22-3-2017 02:24 AM

adoi!! betul ke ni?? Matilah mcm ni, aku kat Turkey skrg. 30/3 nak fly ke London dr Istanbul dgn British Airways. Aku ada laptop ni. ades!!!
https://mforum2.cari.com.my/foru ... &extra=page%3D1
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Post time 22-3-2017 02:30 AM | Show all posts
..takkan erpot yang dah ada US Pre-Clearance macam Abu Dhabi pun kena??

http://www.tradearabia.com/source/2016/03/17/abu.jpg


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Post time 22-3-2017 02:37 AM | Show all posts
Edited by pyropura at 22-3-2017 02:38 AM
mommymonster82 replied at 22-3-2017 02:04 AM
Nasibla dapat presiden yg pengecut..dan paranoid.
... paranoid atau tidak, ummah Sunni kebanggaan kita dah berjaya cipta bom laptop, and its worked perfectly, hokay...

Isle 1- Kapir lahnat 0...

Somalia plane bomber given bomb in laptop' on CCTV
Somali authorities have released a video showing a passenger being given a laptop they say contained a bomb that blew a hole in a passenger plane.
The suspected bomber was reportedly blown out of the plane in the incident shortly after take-off from Mogadishu.
More than 20 people have been arrested in connection with the incident, a government spokesman told BBC Somali.
Most of the passengers, including the alleged bomber, were said to have been originally booked on Turkish Airlines.
No group has said it carried out the bombing but al-Shabab, part of al-Qaeda, is based in Somalia.
What happened on the plane?
Most of the 74 passengers on board the flight to Djibouti were transferred from Turkish Airlines, according to Mohamed Ibrahim Yasin Olad, head of Daallo Airlines, which operated the Airbus 321 that was bombed.
"We were informed about the change a few hours before departure time," he told the BBC.
Mr Olad said he was told the Turkish Airlines flight was cancelled because of bad weather.
Local media had reported that Turkish Airlines had suspended its flights from Mogadishu in December following a failed al-Shabab attack on the airport.
Turkish Airlines spokesman Yahya Ustun told Reuters news agency the carrier had cancelled a flight to Mogadishu last week due to atmospheric conditions and said the company would not make any further comment.
In the video, a man in an orange hi-visibility vest is shown walking with a man in a blue shirt holding what looks like a laptop. Another man in a hat approaches them and it is alleged that the laptop is handed over.
Aviation expert David Learmont, however, is sceptical that the video is all that conclusive.
"I don't think that anybody knows for sure if this is the transaction that was behind the bombing," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa radio programme.
The explosion on the Daallo Airlines flight happened about 15 minutes after take-off, when the plane was only at around 11,000ft (3,350m) and the cabin was not yet pressurised.
It was able to make an emergency landing at Mogadishu airport.
Serbian captain Vlatko Vodopivec said at the time he and others were told the explosion was caused by a bomb.
Daallo Airlines flies regularly from its base in Dubai to Somalia and Djibouti.
Somalia is battling militant Islamist group al-Shabab that has been carrying out deadly attacks in its quest to establish an Islamic state.

http://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/6 ... caneogrwyaam7dp.jpg

http://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/6 ... caneokewcai_ui4.jpg






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Post time 22-3-2017 02:40 AM | Show all posts
The plane made an emergency landing at Mogadishu airport


http://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/6 ... 8063413_capture.png



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Post time 22-3-2017 02:45 AM | Show all posts
mommymonster82 replied at 21-3-2017 06:04 PM
Nasibla dapat presiden yg pengecut..dan paranoid.

takbir     


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Post time 22-3-2017 02:45 AM | Show all posts
Dwdrum replied at 21-3-2017 06:13 PM
Tidak bebaloi mati di tangan ummah delusional

tiada bidadari utk kamu   
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Post time 22-3-2017 02:51 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
all-dajjal replied at 21-3-2017 10:45 AM
tiada bidadari utk kamu

Ewww..... i bukan lesbian  
Ada bidadara?
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Post time 22-3-2017 02:57 AM | Show all posts
Dwdrum replied at 21-3-2017 06:51 PM
Ewww..... i bukan lesbian  
Ada bidadara?

takde....... takziah ler........  
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 Author| Post time 22-3-2017 09:29 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 22-3-2017 09:48 AM | Show all posts
lor..
msuk dlm checked baggage jugek

same je
klu de bom dlm tu,
meletup la jugak

pe kata, banned je semua manusia dari masuk US

kecuali geng LGBT, geng acong ateis, geng celebriti makan/bunuh orang cm kt jepun tu issie sagawa masuk US aja..

mesti aman gemilang terbilang US smpai 1000 tahun.
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Post time 22-3-2017 10:51 PM | Show all posts
alamak artikel dalam bahasa omputih la pulak. beta menyeru khadam beta aka kamus bergerak, si @Deidra masuk mengadap.
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Post time 22-3-2017 11:07 PM | Show all posts
@spiderman80    nie US, thread aku UK   
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Post time 22-3-2017 11:08 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
batmana replied at 22-3-2017 09:48 AM
lor..
msuk dlm checked baggage jugek


Mungkin cargo section kurang compression, so bom laptop not powerful enough to cause damage within that surrounding. Any airline guy can explain?  
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Post time 22-3-2017 11:13 PM | Show all posts

WORLD NEWS | Tue Mar 21, 2017 | 1:09pm EDT
Emirates says U.S. electronics restrictions to last months
By Alexander Cornwell | DUBAI
New U.S.restrictions on passengers carrying electronics on some flights to the United States will be in place initially for nearly seven months before it is reviewed.

An Emirates [EMIRA.UL] spokeswoman said on Tuesday the airline understood that "the directive comes into effect on 25 March 2017 and is valid until 14 October 2017."

A U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokeswoman termed that date "a placeholder for review" of the rule.

The United States will this week restrict passengers traveling from Middle East airports in eight countries from carrying electronic devices larger than a mobile phone on board.

Passengers will instead have to stow larger devices such as tablets and laptops with their checked baggage.

The rule has been imposed because of unspecified security threats.

Earlier, DHS said the procedures would "remain in place until the threat changes" and did not rule out expanding to other airports if circumstances changed.





Nak sabotage airlines dari middle east ke Mr Trump..
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Post time 22-3-2017 11:33 PM | Show all posts
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