BCCLA
calls for investigation on use of the notorious U.S.
"No-fly List" within Canada
Maher Arar, Canada's
most famous victim of torture, was unable to use an automated Air
Canada check-in kiosk
and flagged for "selected security screening" flying from
Montreal to Edmonton. This has been happening to more
and more Canadian citizens. Librarians, pastors, journalists, people
of all walks of life are suddenly finding barriers
to their ability to fly within their own country. The evidence is
mounting that airlines are using the notorious U.S.
"no-fly list" within Canada.
Jason Gratl, President
of the BC Civil Liberties Association: "That this has happened
to Mr. Arar is a sickening irony.
We are awaiting the findings of an inquiry into Canada's alleged complicity
with Mr. Arar's rendition to torture by the
United States. That Canadian airlines are likely using a "watchlist"
compiled by the country responsible for Canadians'
rendition to torture is outrageous."
The BCCLA wrote
to representatives of Transport Canada in May calling for an investigation
in to complaints that
Canadian citizens were being discriminated against by the use of the
infamously inaccurate U.S. no-fly list domestically,
within Canada.
Gratl: "Most
of the complainants we are aware of appear to be no security threat
of any kind, guilty only of having
unfortunately common names. We call on the government to stop the
industry that it is required to regulate from
perpetrating practices that impair the equality and mobility rights
of citizens."
The BCCLA opposes
no-fly lists in principle, arguing that the U.S. no-fly list is an
unmitigated disaster. There appears
to be not a single piece of evidence to suggest that such lists increase
public safety and a volume of experience
showing serious and persistent rights abuses.