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Kerry, Albright slam Trump travel ban

Twelve-year old Eman Ali of Yemen (C) and her father Ahmed Ali (R) arrive at San Francisco International Airport, reuniting with her family for the first time in six years, in San Francisco, California, on Sunday. Ali and her father were blocked entry into the United States after Trump's executive order on immigration. Photo: Reuters

A group of prominent Democrats including former secretaries of state John Kerry and Madeleine Albright yesterday called for a federal appeals court to continue blocking President Donald Trump's travel ban, saying it harms national security.

In a brief submitted to the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, the former top officials argued that the executive order signed by Trump on January 27 was "ill-conceived, poorly implemented and ill-explained."

Trump's ban barred all refugees and travellers from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the United States.

On Friday, following a lawsuit filed by the state of Washington challenging the ban, a federal judge in Seattle temporarily suspended Trump's order pending a wider legal review.

The Trump administration appealed over the weekend to the Ninth Circuit court, where a flurry of legal filings were flooding in early yesterday.

They included a brief from the prominent Democrats, who included Kerry, Albright and several top aides to ex-president Barack Obama.

Among them were national security advisor Susan Rice, CIA chief and defence secretary Leon Panetta, and homeland security chief Janet Napolitano.

Yemeni Ali Alghazali, 13, who was previously prevented from boarding a plane to the US, embraces his mother Morsaleh Alghazali, upon Ali's arrival at JFK airport in New York. Photo: Reuters

"We view the Order as one that ultimately undermines the national security of the United States, rather than making us safer," they argued.

"Reinstating the Executive Order would wreak havoc on innocent lives and deeply held American values."

Specifically, the brief said Trump's travel ban could endanger US troops in the field and disrupt counterterrorism cooperation.

It also feeds Islamic State group propaganda that the United States is at war with Islam, it said.

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