[R-G] US Anti-war Activists Hit by Secret Airport Ban

Usman Majeed u_majeed at straight.com
Wed Aug 6 11:25:11 MDT 2003


>From http://truthout.org/docs_03/080403C.shtml
US Anti-war Activists Hit by Secret Airport Ban
     By Andrew Gumbel
     Independent Digital

     Sunday 03 August 2003

     After more than a year of complaints by some US anti-war activists that
they were being unfairly targeted by airport security, Washington has
admitted the existence of a list, possibly hundreds or even thousands of
names long, of people it deems worthy of special scrutiny at airports.

     The list had been kept secret until its disclosure last week by the new
US agency in charge of aviation safety, the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA). And it is entirely separate from the relatively
well-publicised "no-fly" list, which covers about 1,000 people believed to
have criminal or terrorist ties that could endanger the safety of their
fellow passengers. 

     The strong suspicion of such groups as the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU), which is suing the government to try to learn more, is that
the second list has been used to target political activists who challenge
the government in entirely legal ways. The TSA acknowledged the existence of
the list in response to a Freedom of Information Act request concerning two
anti-war activists from San Francisco who were stopped and briefly detained
at the airport last autumn and told they were on an FBI no-fly list.

     The activists, Rebecca Gordon and Jan Adams, work for a small pacifist
magazine called War Times and say they have never been arrested, let alone
have criminal records. Others who have filed complaints with the ACLU
include a left-wing constitutional lawyer who has been strip-searched
repeatedly when travelling through US airports, and a 71-year-old nun from
Milwaukee who was prevented from flying to Washington to join an
anti-government protest.

     It is impossible to know for sure who might be on the list, or why. The
ACLU says a list kept by security personnel at Oakland airport ran to 88
pages. More than 300 people have been subject to special questioning at San
Francisco airport, and another 24 at Oakland, according to police records.
In no case does it appear that a wanted criminal was apprehended.

     The ACLU's senior lawyer on the case, Jayashri Srikantiah, said she is
troubled by several answers that the TSA gave to her questions. The agency,
she said, had no way of making sure that people did not end up on the list
simply because of things they had said or organisations they belonged to.
Once people were on the list, there was no procedure for trying to get off
it. The TSA did not even think it was important to keep track of people
singled out in error for a security grilling. According to documents the
agency released, it saw "no pressing need to do so".

     It is not just left-wingers who feel unfairly targeted. Right-wing
civil libertarians have spoken out against the secret list, and at least one
conservative organisation, the Eagle Forum, says its members have been
interrogated by security staff.

     The complaints by the ACLU form part of a pattern of protest since the
11 September attacks, with the Bush administration repeatedly under fire for
detaining people on the flimsiest of grounds in the name of the "war on
terror". Many Muslims have had a hard time, especially if they have a
surname such as Hussein.


-----------------------------
"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has, and it never will.
If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor
freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who want crops without plowing
the ground. They want rain without thunder and   lightning. They want the
ocean without the awful roar of its waters."  (Frederick Douglass)








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