The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), an agency of the United Nations, said in a statement that it supports "global uniformity" in regulations in order to facilitate international travel.
But it added that such restrictions must be at the "discretion" of ICAO member states.
The ICAO noted that the Convention on International Civil Aviation, which outlines rules for airlines and airport authorities in 191 countries, already "stipulates that passengers and cabin baggage must be screened."
But individual states also have a "responsibility to keep the level of threat to civil aviation under constant review and to adjust relevant aviation security provisions accordingly."
On Tuesday, Washington and London announced a ban on laptops and computer tablets in cabins on flights from Turkey, as well as several countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
Canada and France are reviewing allies' intelligence as they mull similar measures.
Paradoxically, the ICAO emphasised that its work on the transport of hazardous materials, "notably incidents involving devices containing lithium batteries may be more easily mitigated in the cabin than in checked baggage."
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