Latest Updates: flying while muslim RSS

  • thabet 5:37 am on March 4, 2010 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , body scanners, , , flying while muslim, ,

    Two women barred from flight to Pakistan for refusing full-body scan:

    Two women, one a Muslim, have become the first people to be barred from boarding a flight because they refused to go through a full-body airport scanner.

    Manchester airport confirmed today that the women, who were booked to fly to Islamabad with Pakistan International Airlines, were told they could not get on the plane after they refused to be scanned for medical and religious reasons.

    The women had been selected at random, said the airport.

    The Muslim woman decided to forfeit her ticket and left her luggage at the airport. Her companion also left the airport saying she did not go through the scanner on medical grounds because she had an infection.

     
  • johnpi 8:38 am on February 11, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , flying while learning Arabic, flying while muslim

    Student detained for toting Arabic flash cards sues police.

    “As someone who travels by plane, I want TSA agents to do their job to keep flights safe,” Nick George says. “But I don’t understand how locking me up and harassing me just because I was carrying the flashcards made anybody safer. No one should be treated like a criminal for simply learning one of the most widely-spoken languages in the world.”

    Here’s Nick George, who was asked about OBL and if he was a communist, in a video talking about what happened to him.

     
  • johnpi 9:53 am on January 29, 2010 | 14 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , flying while muslim, , , , , ,

    CNN has posted this op-ed piece on ‘flying while Muslim’ by Nafees A. Syed, currently an editor at the Harvard Crimson and at the Harvard-MIT journal on Islam and society, Ascent. She is also chairwoman of the Harvard Institute of Politics Policy Group on Racial Profiling. The article is mostly addressed to a non-Muslim audience, but she does speak to Muslims at one part:

    And Muslims, here’s something to think about: If your knowledge of Islam came from common stereotypes, wouldn’t you also be misinformed about the faith and its followers? The Quran says, “[God has] made you into nations and tribes, so that you might come to know one another (49:13).” So get to know your fellow Americans.

    There are some Americans who think Muslims are terrorists and some Muslims who think that other Americans are willfully ignorant. Neither group deserves such a label. Psychologist Henri Tajfel, who was a Holocaust survivor, explained how we isolate ourselves into an “in-group” and facilitate discrimination of an “out-group.”

    It probably wouldn’t have been appropriate for a CNN article, but I would have liked to hear her reconcile this advice with the concept of al-wala’ wa al-bara’ (doctrine of loyalty and disassociation). I know we’ve discussed this before, but here’s a refresher on the concept from this source:

    Abd al Wahhab argued that it was imperative for Muslims not to befriend, ally themselves with, or imitate non-Muslims or heretical Muslims. Furthermore, this enmity and hostility of Muslims toward non-Muslims and heretical Muslims had to be visible and unequivocal. For example, it was forbidden for a Muslim to be the first to greet a non-Muslim; and even if a Muslim returned a greeting, a Muslim should never wish a non-Muslim peace. Likewise, Muslims could convey their condolences to non-Muslims, but they should never pray that God have mercy upon them or ask God to forgive their sins. Muslims were only allowed to say “May God guide you to the right path” or “May God compensate you for your loss.”

    If a Muslim violated any of these rules, he or she was to be treated as an apostate. The same dire consequences would follow if a Muslim referred to a non-Muslim as “brother” or “sister.”

     
  • johnpi 12:03 pm on January 19, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , flying while muslim,

    Detroit-bound flight crew made jittery by Muslim passengers.

    As Northwest Airlines flight 243 from Amsterdam to Detroit — the same route taken by a Nigerian man accused of trying to blow up a plane Christmas Day — began its descent on Detroit, four passengers began to act in ways that alarmed their fellow passengers.

    One or more of the men reportedly pulled a blanket over his head. When the plane landed at around 1:05 p.m., it was met by police.

    In a statement sent to ABC News, the Transportation Security Administration said it was “notified of unruly passengers” on the flight. Federal authorities, including agents from Customs & Border Protection, Federal Air Marshals, and the FBI agents, held the plane from the gate for 15 minutes.

     
  • johnpi 1:38 pm on January 14, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , flying while muslim, , nudists,

    ‘Thanks Al Qaeda!’ Largest nudist organization in North America endorses new airport scanners.

     
  • johnpi 9:09 am on January 14, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , flying while muslim

    Black men are now officially lumped in with Arabs and Muslim men around the world as potential terrorists and dangers to the West in the wake of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s attempted Christmas day suicide bombing.

    It looks like America is getting rid of its Civil Rights so that the government can actively profile all persons who are as General McInerney said on Fox News, “are Muslim and between the ages of 18-24.” Both he and Newt Gingrich won’t say stop all people brown or black skinned; the majority will draw this conclusion on their own. The operative words are “discriminating based upon behavior.”

    As much as people willfully fool themselves into thinking that the “stepped up” efforts by security agencies will be spent on reviewing the suspicious actions of passengers, there is not enough time management resources to properly train and educate TSA employees to become astute observers of suspicious behavior. Instead TSA workers will revert to the easier way to stopping “the enemies” – discriminate based upon name, religious affiliation, race and ethnicity.

     
  • johnpi 11:44 pm on January 6, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , flying while muslim, , , , , ,

    Responses in the national medias of countries that are on the new list of states whose citizens will receive heightened security attention entering the US in the wake of the Flight 253 attack.

    Pakistan:

    In forcing the administration to be reactive and blindly discriminatory in the aftermath of the bombing attempt, Al Qaeda may have scored an even more significant ideological victory than would have been afforded by an attack on a plane.

    Lebanon:

    [Quoting an American analyst] “The vast majority of the Lebanese have nothing, and want nothing, to do with terrorism. And we should want them and welcome them here in the United States,” he said.

    Saudi Arabia:

    The extra check means, he said [Abdul Rahman Al-Zamil, president of the Riyadh-based Export Development Center], Saudi companies would not be able to send their executives and representatives to the US easily.

    “No doubt, the new measures will also affect delegations that play a big role in boosting trade ties,” he said.

    Al-Zamil said most countries would avoid participation in exhibitions or conferences in the US in order to avoid a possibility of their officials and representatives being harassed and getting into trouble in the US.

    “This measure is going to affect major projects in the Kingdom, as some products related to these projects are being manufactured in the US and engineers from Saudi Arabia have to go there to inspect them. Importing these products from other countries will affect the standards set by the projects,” he pointed out.

     
  • johnpi 8:13 am on January 6, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , flying while muslim

    Muslim woman treated like ‘terrorist’ at U.S. customs.

    Ayat Manna is originally from Jordan but has lived in Nova Scotia for 15 years. She was attempting to fly across the US-Canadian border to visit her husband in Ohio.

    Manna says she asked the border official whether she had singled her out because she was the only woman wearing a head scarf, but she received no answer. Instead, she was taken to a back room and questioned for four hours, including what she says were rude, personal inquiries.

    When the border officials asked her questions she didn’t understand and began to yell at her, Manna became confused and started to cry.

    “It felt like I was a terrorist. That’s exactly what it felt like,” she says.

    During the four hours of questioning, the officials asked for her bank account number and then called her bank to get all her financial information.

    The officials took her photo and her fingerprints and eventually let her go, but Manna says she still doesn’t understand why this happened to her.

    Officials told her she has been banned from flying to the US.

     
  • johnpi 7:59 pm on January 5, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , flying while muslim, ,

    Child porn fears block under 18s from full body scanners.

    Airport security personnel in British airports have been barred from scanning passengers under 18 years old with the newly adopted full body scanners due to warnings that the new devices may breach child pornography laws.

    The full-body scanners adopted by British airports in the wake of the failed Christmas Day bombing attempt have come under fire over fears that the graphic images produced by the x-ray machines may violate child pornography laws.

     
  • johnpi 10:32 am on January 3, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , flying while muslim, , , , , , , Tunku Varadarajan

    ‘My daughter’s on the no-fly list’ writes Chris Kelly. She’s 12 years old.

    So I should hate the No Fly List. Besides the personal inconvenience, it runs counter to a solid third of the Bill of Rights. But I’m conflicted. Because I have a pretty good idea why my daughter’s on the list. It’s because she has the same name as this guy:

    Photobucket

    In 1993 this IRA thug walked into a fish shop in Belfast with a bomb that went off prematurely (of course) injuring 57 people, including a 79-year-old woman and two two-year-old boys. It also killed ten people, including a thirteen-year-old girl named Leanne Baird, and her little sister, Michelle, seven. Just like Jesus would have wanted.

    But I have some disappointing news for Mike Gallagher [radio host who recently said all people with the following names should get profiled]: The killer’s name isn’t Abdul or Ahmed or Mohammed. It’s Sean Kelly.

    Which is why America has to wake up, get serious about terrorism, and racially profile all Irish Catholics. Because you never know where they’ll strike next with their religion of hate. Wait, that can’t be right.

    Kelly also coins a new term: “Varadarajan Stoicism” – as in Tunku Varadarajan, who recently attempted to popularize the phrase “going Muslim.”

     
  • johnpi 1:56 pm on December 27, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, flying while Nigerian

    Time limit on the airplane bathroom for Nigerians.

    Another Nigerian man has been arrested on another flight from Amsterdam to Detroit bearing the same flight number as the one Umar Farouk Abdulmutallah attempted to blow up.

    He reportedly had locked himself in the bathroom, and was verbally disruptive.

    Security and airline personnel are on edge since the attempted terror attack on Christmas Day, and the law enforcement official said that lesser incidents had been reported on other flights arriving in Detroit, but the incident with the Nigerian man had sparked the most concern.

     
  • johnpi 10:13 pm on December 26, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 'strip-search' scans, flying while muslim, ,

    Experts now say that passengers need to undergo full-body scans, but these types of scans are incredibly invasive of privacy and have been dubbed ‘strip-search scans.’

    If you’re adverse to removing your hijab or showing the area between your knees and your navel, imagine somebody looking at you through a scanning device with this magnification:

    Photobucket

    Cheryl Johnson, general manager of the Office of Transport Security, said:’ It will show the private parts of people, but what we’ve decided is that we’re not going to blur those out, because it severely limits the detection capabilities.’

     
  • johnpi 12:29 am on December 26, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , flying while muslim,

    Security to be ratcheted up on US-bound international flights.

     
  • bingregory 4:41 am on December 17, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, Hasan Elahi, performance art, , Tracking Transience

    Rutgers University professor Hasan Elahi maintains a website tracking his every movement, so the government doesn’t have to. Tracking Transience has been up since 2007, when he explained the idea of pre-emptive profiling to Wired Magazine:

    “I’ve discovered that the best way to protect your privacy is to give it away,” he says, grinning as he sips his venti Black Eye. Elahi relishes upending the received wisdom about surveillance. The government monitors your movements, but it gets things wrong. You can monitor yourself much more accurately. Plus, no ambitious agent is going to score a big intelligence triumph by snooping into your movements when there’s a Web page broadcasting the Big Mac you ate four minutes ago in Boise, Idaho. “It’s economics,” he says. “I flood the market.”

     
  • johnpi 11:01 am on December 10, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, , , ,

    Mother of one of the group arrested in Pakistan says they went there to arrange a marriage for their son.

    The mother of one of the five young men arrested in Pakistan told CNN Thursday that her son was in that country to get married, not to plot terror attacks as Pakistani police have alleged.
    ….

    In an interview with CNN, Subira Farouk said her son, Umar, was one of the young men detained in the case. She said her husband also was arrested, which would bring to six the number of people in custody. Police confirmed they have six people in custody, not five, as was originally reported.

    Farouk said her son would never plot a terror attack. She described him as a business student at George Mason University in suburban Washington.

    Farouk said she and her husband went to Pakistan to arrange a marriage for their son, who surprised her by traveling from the United States.

    One significant result of the decline of Pakistan’s reputation in America is that there is now an elevated risk to anyone traveling to Pakistan of getting caught up in something like this, over and above the usual harassment and hyper-vigilance that now applies to Muslims during travel.

     
  • johnpi 11:06 am on December 7, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, ,

    Disney exec, ‘Please fix this’: Decline in foreign visitors to the US has cost the country about a quarter of a million jobs.

    While visitation to the U.S. doesn’t feel like an export business, in essence, it is. We export the promise our destinations offer as brands, or a means of encouraging people to come to our country, whether they wish to visit Disneyland, see our nation’s capital, or attend one of our universities.
    ….

    Since 2001, foreign visitor arrivals have dropped off substantially. That’s due both to the fact that the very process of visiting the U.S. makes many overseas visitors feel unwelcome by the time they get here and because competition from foreign travel destinations has, in the meantime, increased significantly.

     
  • aziz 12:17 pm on December 4, 2009 | 19 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, ,

    yet another Scary Muslim Email, this time supposedly about a “dry run” hijacking on Air Tran Flight 297. It’s so bad its good.

    I particularly loved the way the author simply invents nonsensical Islamic jurisprudence about proper behavior in a strip club. It lends the email a touch of the surreal. The commenters at snopes.com are pretty merciless in their mockery:

    If a Muslim man goes into a strip club, he has to view the woman via mirror with his back to her. (don’t ask me….I don’t make the rules, but I’ve studied).

    This is correct. Also, a Muslim man may:
    * Steal things, as long as the person he is stealing from won't notice for at least 3 days
    * Drink alcohol, as long as it is through a curly straw
    * Eat pork, as long as it has mustard and is on wholegrain bread

    And the discussion thread at Balloon Juice is a must-read, where they note with glee the rightwing comment that "There's far too much detail here for this to be a fabrication.”

     
  • johnpi 9:57 am on November 1, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , flying while muslim, , , watch list

    400,000 on FBI watch list – 1,600 new names nominated every day…

    Newly released FBI data offer evidence of the broad scope and complexity of the nation’s terrorist watch list, documenting a daily flood of names nominated for inclusion to the controversial list.

    During a 12-month period ended in March this year, for example, the U.S. intelligence community suggested on a daily basis that 1,600 people qualified for the list because they presented a “reasonable suspicion,” according to data provided to the Senate Judiciary Committee by the FBI in September and made public last week.

    FBI officials cautioned that each nomination “does not necessarily represent a new individual, but may instead involve an alias or name variant for a previously watchlisted person.”

    The ever-churning list is said to contain more than 400,000 unique names and over 1 million entries. The committee was told that over that same period, officials asked each day that 600 names be removed and 4,800 records be modified. Fewer than 5 percent of the people on the list are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents. Nine percent of those on the terrorism list, the FBI said, are also on the government’s “no fly” list.

     
  • johnpi 7:27 pm on October 20, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , flying while muslim,

    Imams settle lawsuit over removal from 2006 flight.

    Six Muslim clerics who were taken off a US Airways flight in 2006 after fellow passengers reported what they considered suspicious behaviour have claimed victory in their discrimination lawsuit.

    The terms of the settlement were not released, and there was no apology/admission of wrongdoing.

    Marwan Sadeddin, of Phoenix, Arizona, said the settlement does not include an apology but he considers it an acknowledgment that a mistake was made.

     
  • johnpi 8:27 pm on October 3, 2009 | 12 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, ,

    Belligerent policies targeting foreign travellers to the US may have sunk the US campaign to host the Olympics.

    In spite of President Obama’s lobbying efforts, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) may have chosen to reject hosting the 2016 summer olympic games in Chicago due to the post-9/11 visa tourist policies established by his predecessor, George W. Bush.

    Michael Froomkin, Professor at the University of Miami School of Law, is convinced that the “the same stupid anti-visitor policy that is destroying American higher education” also sunk Chicago’s Olympic bid. Chicago was eliminated during the first round and received the fewest votes.

    A New York Times article points out:

    In the official question-and-answer session following the Chicago presentation, Syed Shahid Ali, an I.O.C. member from Pakistan, asked the toughest question. He wondered how smooth it would be for foreigners to enter the United States for the Games because doing so can sometimes, he said, be “a rather harrowing experience.”

     
  • johnpi 9:09 pm on April 21, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Customs and Border Patrol. CBP, flying while muslim, , , ,

    Muslim Advocates, a Muslim civil rights advocacy group founded by the National Association of Muslim Lawyers (NAML) has released a report, Unreasonable Intrusions: Investigating the Politics, Faith & Finances of Americans Returning Home, that details complaints of US Muslims nationwide about abuses they have experienced upon re-entering the country at the hands of Customs and Border Patrol. The report also provides the organization’s policy recommendations for how to maintain border security while protecting US citizen’s rights.

    Below are some reported questions citizens who are Muslims have been asked upon attempting to re-enter the US. This may also be a good place to relink Abdul Malik Mujahid’s 32 travel tips for Muslims.

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 10:09 am on January 3, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim, ,

    Travel tips for Muslims: We’re starting to see new lists of travel tips for Muslims in the wake of the AirTran nine incident. Br. Abdul Malik Mujahid seems to have put together the most definitive, with 32 tips.

    Here are a few samples:

    What will you be doing?

    This is another question immigration officials may ask. Avoid being vague and give a very precise answer. To do this, you need to prepare before you get to the immigration counter. If you are planning to visit a relative or friend, for example, call them before you travel and confirm with them your plans to visit, along with the dates you will be there. That way, if officers want to call your relative or friend to double check your story, there will be no inconsistencies.

    Avoid being too courteous

    Being too courteous while being Muslim may actually get you kicked off a flight. That is exactly what happened to some young Muslims who were traveling from Chicago to New York to catch a flight for their trip to Makkah. During a stopover in Philadelphia, a group of women boarded and wanted to sit together. These nice Muslim kids offered to switch their seats with them, but when they got up to do this, the pilot who profiled them because of their religion (they had white, brown and black skin colors) kicked them off the plane. Other passengers tried to explain to the pilot that they were trying to be courteous. Apparently, the pilot was afraid of what these Muslims were planning to do. The nice young people had to drive to New York to catch their flight to Makkah.

    So save your courtesy for the right time and right location.

    Do NOT try to be funny if you fit the profile

    Jokes about bombs are taken seriously even if you do not fit the profile. However, if you fit the profile, and you’re trying to lighten up the atmosphere, the airport, bus or train station are the wrong places to be funny. In fact, wisecracks about any topics are a wrong idea. If you are stopped in your car for speeding or some other traffic infringement, do not joke with the officer about any topics either. Just wait patiently until comedians eventually start making jokes about profiling in America.

     
  • johnpi 8:16 am on January 2, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: flying while muslim,

    Conversation topic that can get Muslims pulled off an airplane #688:

    “The conversation, as we were walking through the plane trying to find our seats, was just about where the safest place in an airplane is,” Sahin said. “We were (discussing whether it was safest to sit near) the wing, or the engine or the back or the front, but that’s it. We didn’t say anything else that would raise any suspicion.”

    The conversation did not contain the words “bomb,” “explosion,” “terror” or other words that might have aroused suspicion, Irfan said.

    “When we were talking, when we turned around, I noticed a couple of girls kind of snapped their heads,” said Sobia Ijaz, Irfan’s wife. “I kind of thought to myself, ‘Oh, you know, maybe they’re going to say something.’ It didn’t occur to me that they were going to make it such a big issue.”

     
  • Andrea Useem 11:06 am on July 7, 2008 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , flying while muslim, ,

    Is there an increase in stress-related illness for American Muslims (and others who are mistaken for Muslims)? I set out to answer this question, but didn’t find any hard data, to my surprise. Wondering about your own anecdotal impressions.

     
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