Iraq dropped from ban list after lobbying at highest levels: Report

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ANI New York [U.S.A.]
Last Updated : Mar 06 2017 | 10:48 PM IST

After reports in the U.S. media suggested that Iraq will not feature in the ban list in the revised immigration order by President Donald Trump, it has emerged that the country's name was dropped after intensive lobbying from the Iraqi government at the highest levels.

On Monday, White House advisor Kellyanne Conway confirmed the news as she told Fox and Friends that Iraq will not be included under the travel ban "based on their enhanced screening and reporting measures."

CNN reports that, according to a senior US official, the lobbying included a phone call between Trump and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on February 10 and an in-person conversation between Abadi and Vice President Mike Pence in Munich on February 18.

The report says that those conversations were followed by discussions between Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and members of the Iraqi government about vetting measures in place that would prevent suspected terrorists from leaving Iraq and coming to the United States.

In Trump's call with Abadi, the President vowed to seek a resolution to his counterpart's concerns about his citizens' being unable to enter the United States, according to a readout of the phone call from Baghdad.

Trump also faced pressure to remove Iraq from the order from some American national security officials, who argued the restriction burdened a key anti-ISIS partner. Some of those voices were holdovers from the Obama administration.

Trump's executive order on immigrants and refugees, that was halted by a federal court, indefinitely barred the Syrian refugees from entering the country, suspend all refugee admissions for 120 days and block citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries namely Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen from entering the United States for 90 days.

Trump administration is to announce the revised travel ban on Monday.

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First Published: Mar 06 2017 | 10:38 PM IST

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