by Dr. Peregrino BrimahIn 2010 after Omar Farouk
Abdulmutallab, the Christmas underwear bomber's attempt to bring a plane
down over Detroit, the Obama administration enforced travel
restrictions from 14 terror-linked countries.
Early that January
Obama in an emergency order slammed extra foreign airport screening on
passengers with passports or traveling to the US States from or through
fourteen countries known to have major connections with Islamist
terrorism (Afghanistan, Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Yemen...plus Cuba).
The restrictions were widely protested and finally lifted four months later.
America's
new President Donald Trump on Friday put a four-month hold on allowing
refugees into the United States and temporarily barred travelers from
Syria, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. While more
severe, with full bans to all travel through or from these nations,
Trump's list was half as long as Obama's.
Lebanon, Nigeria, Algeria, Afghanistan were some of the countries lucky to escape Trumps ban.
While
15 of the 19 911 airplane hijackers were Saudi Arabian citizens,
several reports have criticized Trump for excluding the kingdom which
has severally been linked to financing global terror including the 911
attack on US soil.
While the US' actions under Obama and Trump
may be viewed as extreme or Islamophobic, it is important to note that
wealthy Gulf nations that could comfortably assimilate the entire
population of refugees have imposed similar bans on refugees from Syria
citing security and politico-cultural threats. It is hardly worth
mentioning that Saudi Arabia, the Islamic capital and other Arab Gulf
states can hardly boast of ever accepting refugees from Sudan, Somalia,
Yemen or other Muslim countries.
The repeated travel
restrictions to Muslim nations should prompt a new drive for tolerance
and peaceful co-existence as well as urge wealthy Muslim nations to do
more for their Muslim brethren.
The pain for those affected by
the bans can hardly be imagined but it is important to put things in
perspective and find ways to take advantage of the hard-times to steer a
new path in the Muslim world.
Dr. Peregrino Brimah
@EveryNigerian
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