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Anything but a ban: airlines meet in bid to keep laptops in cabins

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A TSA official removes a laptop from a bag for scanning at Terminal 4 of JFK airport in New York. Photo: Reuters

Top airline industry players are meeting Monday and Tuesday in Cancun to seek alternatives to the US and British bans on laptops and tablets on certain flights, which they say is hurting business.

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The computer bans are looming large over the agenda as the International Air Transport Association (IATA) holds its annual meeting in the Mexican resort city.

Alternative proposals include sniffer dogs, bomb-detection technology, increased training - anything but the ban, which IATA says is threatening the industry just as it was enjoying a boom.

With fuel prices low and 3.8 billion passengers flying last year - a figure that is expected to double in the next 20 years - “the industry is doing quite well,” said IATA’s director general, Alexandre de Juniache.

“Airlines are in the black and it’s the eighth year in a row,” he told journalists during a conference call ahead of the meeting.

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But the bright financial outlook is clouded by the in-cabin ban on electronic devices larger than a cell phone on flights between the United States and 10 airports in Turkey, the Middle East and North Africa - imposed in March by President Donald Trump’s administration.

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