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		 UK 
		lawmakers to debate petition seeking ban on Trump, no vote planned 
		
		 
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		[January 06, 2016] 
		LONDON (Reuters) - British lawmakers 
		are to hold a debate on a petition signed by more than half a million 
		people calling for U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump 
		to be barred from Britain after his proposal to stop Muslims entering 
		the United States. 
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			 The debate, called by the Petitions Committee of the lower house 
			of parliament, will be held on Jan. 18 but will not be followed by a 
			vote. 
			 
			The British government responds to all petitions that gain more than 
			10,000 signatures and topics are considered for parliamentary debate 
			if they reach 100,000. 
			 
			"By scheduling a debate ... the Committee is not expressing a view 
			on whether or not the government should exclude Donald Trump from 
			the UK," said committee chairwoman Helen Jones. 
			 
			"As with any decision to schedule a petition for debate, it simply 
			means that the committee has decided that the subject should be 
			debated," she said in a statement. "A debate will allow a range of 
			views to be expressed." 
			
			  Last month Trump, a billionaire developer and frontrunner for the 
			Republican presidential nomination, prompted international outrage 
			with his call for a ban on all Muslims entering the United States. 
			His comments followed a shooting spree by two Muslims who the FBI 
			said had been radicalised. 
			 
			British Prime Minister David Cameron said the comments were 
			"divisive, unhelpful and quite simply wrong". His finance minister 
			George Osborne said Trump's comments flew in the face of the 
			founding principles of the United States but that banning him from 
			Britain was not the best way to respond. 
			 
			Britain is a close ally of the United States, including in the 
			Western military campaign targeting Islamist militants in Iraq and 
			Syria. 
			 
			
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			Trump owns two golf courses in Scotland which he visited in 2015. 
			 
			In the past, people have been banned from entering Britain for 
			fostering hatred that might provoke inter-community violence. 
			 
			The petition said: "If the United Kingdom is to continue applying 
			the 'unacceptable behavior' criteria to those who wish to enter its 
			borders, it must be fairly applied to the rich as well as poor, and 
			the weak as well as the powerful." 
			 
			It was launched by Suzanne Kelly, a Scottish-based campaigner and 
			longtime critic of Trump's latest golf course in Aberdeenshire. 
			 
			(Reporting by Stephen Addison; Editing by Gareth Jones) 
			
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