Airlines • Heads of airlines affected by the ban criticized the selective nature of the ban. •
Qatar Airways CEO
Akbar Al Baker suggested that "instead of going from the airports where there is a ban, (terrorists) will go to airports where there is no ban". •
Emirates President
Tim Clark said that "(to) suggest that Dubai doesn't have the equal capabilities or better than the Europeans, the Americans and the Asians in terms of search, interdiction and surveillance, I find amazing", and the ban would be "hugely disruptive". • Affected airlines began taking measures to try and mitigate effects of the ban: • Emirates,
Qatar Airways and
Turkish Airlines allowed passengers to use their large electronic equipment at the gate, up to the moment of boarding. •
Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways offered free
Wi-Fi to all business and first class passengers traveling to the US. Turkish Airlines offered free Wi-Fi for all passengers traveling to the US or UK. •
Air India, an airline not affected by the ban but which also flies to the United States, reported seeing bookings double after the electronics ban was implemented. • On 20 April 2017, Emirates announced that as a result of "a significant deterioration in the booking profiles on all our U.S. routes" from this ban,
Executive Order 13769 and
Executive Order 13780, it was reducing the capacity and number of flights to the US.
Other states • The
United Kingdom government also implemented an electronic bans for flights to the
United Kingdom, but covered a different range of airports and airlines. • The
Australian government has decided against implementing an electronics ban, but chose to increase security screening for Middle Eastern flights to Australia.
Other non-state parties • The Director General of the
International Air Transport Association Alexandre de Juniac has said that the "current measures are not acceptable as a long-term solution" and "the commercial distortions they create are severe", calling for governments to find an alternative to the electronics ban. ==Airports subject to the US electronics ban==