Etihad benefits from Abu Dhabi border post amid travel ban

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Bloomberg

A US border post in Abu Dhabi has handed local carrier Etihad Airways an advantage over its Gulf rivals following President Donald Trump’s moves to curb immigration from a clutch of mainly Muslim
countries.
The so-called pre-clearance facility means that travellers from the affected nations who think they qualify for entry can have their paperwork processed before leaving the Middle East, rather than risk being turned away on arrival in the US, Etihad Chief Executive Officer James Hogan said.
“In these times of uncertainty people are moving over to Abu Dhabi to take advantage of that clearance,” Hogan said at a briefing in Serbia. “If you’re going into secondary search that’s better happening in Abu Dhabi than maybe on arrival in New York. So we’re seeing an increase in
bookings.”
Gulf rival Emirates, the world’s biggest long-haul airline, said last week that there had been a 35 percent drop in the rate of US bookings in the wake of Trump’s initial ban on travel from seven nations — later cut to six — with demand recovering only slowly. Its Dubai hub has no pre-clearance option.
The US Customs and Border Protection facility at Abu Dhabi International Terminal 3, which opened in 2014, allows passengers to complete immigration and customs inspections before they depart. It’s the only such outpost in the Middle East and one of a handful outside North America, though the federal government has said it could seek to add more as part of a push to combat terror threats before would-be perpetrators even board a plane.
Etihad currently serves New York, Washington, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles and San Francisco in the U.S., and says it doesn’t plan to add further destinations.

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