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With Trump's Travel Ban Blocked, Visa-Holders, Refugees Scramble to Board Flights

Munther Alaskry, accompanied by his wife Hiba, son Hassan and daughter Dima, gather their luggage as they leave JFK International Airport, in New York City, on Feb. 3. Alaskry and his family arrived after the Trump administration reversed course and said he and other interpreters who supported the U.S. military could come to America.
Richard Drew AP
Munther Alaskry, accompanied by his wife Hiba, son Hassan and daughter Dima, gather their luggage as they leave JFK International Airport, in New York City, on Feb. 3. Alaskry and his family arrived after the Trump administration reversed course and said he and other interpreters who supported the U.S. military could come to America.

Fuad Sharif Suleman shows his U.S. immigrant visa in Erbil, Iraq, on Jan. 30, after returning to Iraq from Egypt, where he and his family were prevented from boarding a plane to the U.S. following President Trump's decision to temporarily bar travelers from seven countries, including Iraq.
Safin Hamed AFP/Getty Images
Fuad Sharif Suleman shows his U.S. immigrant visa in Erbil, Iraq, on Jan. 30, after returning to Iraq from Egypt, where he and his family were prevented from boarding a plane to the U.S. following President Trump's decision to temporarily bar travelers from seven countries, including Iraq.

A federal appeals court denied President Donald Trump's attempt to restore his travel ban on refugees and visa holders from seven majority-Muslim countries Sunday morning, sending people scrambling to board planes while it's legal once again for them to enter the country.

The court set a timeline for the next developments, while also denying the immediate stay Trump asked for as part of his appeal against a Seattle judge's ruling that suspended the President's travel ban on Friday.

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The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit has asked those opposed to the ban to file their opposition to Trump's appeal by 3 a.m., ET (11:59 p.m., Sunday, PT), on Monday, and for the Justice Department, representing Trump's administration, to reply to that by 6 p.m., ET, Monday.

For now, however, previously-approved refugees and green-card holders from the seven countries listed in the ban are able once again to enter the U.S.

William Lacey Swing, the director general of the United Nations International Organization for Migration or IOM, told NPR his agency is hoping to resettle between 1,800 and 2,000 refugees who had already been approved prior to the ban.

"It's quite complex now," Swing told NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro on Sunday. "But you can be sure from our side that we're going to do everything possible to get them on those flights, to take advantage of this window of opportunity... Unless of course, the courts change things once more."

Refugees, visa-holders begin boarding flights

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Airport officials in Cairo say a total of 33 U.S.-bound migrants from Yemen, Syria and Iraq have boarded flights on their way to the United States, according to the Associated Press. The 33 hadn't previously been turned away, but were migrants rushing to take advantage of the window offered by the Sunday ruling.

Ahmed al-Durah, an accountant from Damascus with two daughters, a three-year-old and a 10-month-old, told NPR they were driving to the airport in Amman last week from the northern Jordanian city of Irbid when they received a call telling them their flight was cancelled.

The IOM called again Sunday asking if he would be willing to leave for the U.S. on Monday.

"I told them of course, I'm ready," al-Durah said. "I sold everything and our bags are still packed."

By Sunday afternoon, the family was booked on a flight scheduled to leave Monday morning. He said his wife's uncle in Atlanta had rented a house for them there and paid the rent six months in advance.

It was less clear whether the IOM in Lebanon was starting to reschedule flights for refugees.

Amin Khayat had been scheduled to leave on Friday for Detroit with his wife, five children and his 77-year-old mother, who is suffering from cancer.

"They stopped her chemotherapy because we were travelling and then when the flight was cancelled, the hospital said it was sorry but it couldn't restart it," Khayat told NPR by phone from Beirut.

Khayat is an electronics repairman from Damascus, and said he had given up their rented apartment and taken the children out of school.

He said he tried calling the IOM Sunday, but since it was a weekend, he couldn't reach anyone.

Iraqis accepted for resettlement under a special program for military interpreters and employees of U.S. companies in Iraq were told earlier in the week they were cleared to leave.

"The embassy called me and said it was OK for me and others like me to travel," said Fuad Sharif Suleman, an Iraqi Kurd deported back to Iraq last week from Cairo while he and his family were en route to New York.

Reached by telephone just before he boarded the plane in Erbil early Saturday, Suleman said his children – aged 19, 17 and 10 – were a little bit nervous but excited about their new home in Nashville.

Suleman said there had been an outpouring of support in the U.S. after he was sent back to Iraq. "I had friends in Nashville, but now I have a lot more," he told NPR.

President Trump and his administration's response

President Trump hasn't said anything publicly Sunday about the federal court's decision to deny his stay request. He penned a flurry of tweets yesterday, however, aimed at Seattle judge James Robart and his original decision to temporarily lift the travel ban while a case brought by the states of Washington and Minnesota is heard.

The tweet illustrates a key difference in opinion between Trump and his supporters, and the people working to vet and place refugees in America.

Swing, the director general of the IOM, said it's hard for him to imagine a stricter vetting process then the one already in place prior to the ban. The refugees he's hoping to relocate to the U.S. while the travel ban is lifted have already made it through that process.

"You have eight U.S. government agencies who are vetting them," said Swing. "They are looking at six different security databases, they're doing five different background checks. They have three separate in-person interviews, and then two inner-agency reviews of all that.

"So far the problem has been that since 9/11 the security has been so strict that you're talking about at least 18 months until you can travel."

The White House obviously sees it differently. In a statement on Friday, Trump's administration announced its intention to appeal the decision to lift the ban, and added, "The president's order is intended to protect the homeland and he has the constitutional authority and responsibility to protect the American people."

More than a dozen legal challenges have been filed against the ban around the country, according to The Washington Post, and just one judge, U.S. District Judge Nathan Gorton, has indicated he was willing to let Trump's order stand.

Reporters asked Trump about the appeal outside his private Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, on Saturday night.

"We'll win," he said, and briefly paused. "For the safety of our country, we'll win."

You can find the court documents related to the Trump administration's appeal and the original decision to temporarily lift the ban here.

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.