NEW YORK,
Aug. 25 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Sikh Coalition, the
nation's largest Sikh civil rights organization, strongly opposes new headwear
screening procedures put in place by the Transportation Security
Administration on
August 4, 2007. TSA officials told the Sikh Coalition that
the new Standard Operating Procedure includes a guidance recommending that
America's 43,000 airport screeners pull aside turban-wearing travelers for
secondary screening, based solely on their headwear.
The turban is the only form of religious garb specifically identified by
the TSA as an example of headwear that could lead to secondary screening at
security checkpoints. Other examples include cowboy hats and berets. The TSA's
policy accounts for no difference between the turban, a religious requirement,
and fashion headwear.
"Telling screeners to search people in turbans is the same as telling them
to search black people or Arabs or Muslims. The policy allows screeners to
single out travelers on the basis of their religion. The message this sends to
the public is that people who wear turbans are dangerous," said Amardeep
Singh, Executive Director of the Sikh Coalition. "That attitude challenges the
spirit of religious pluralism on which our country was built."
The new policy revokes standard procedures, created in November 2001 to
address Americans' national security concerns, while safeguarding religious
freedom. That policy required TSA screeners to search Sikhs' turbans only when
they had not successfully cleared a metal detector. Screeners were required to
do as much as possible to avoid physically touching the turban. The new
procedures recommend physical pat-downs of the turban, without acknowledging
the religious sensitivities involved, and do not include any guidance on how
to perform these manual checks.
In addition, these procedures were implemented without input from
community groups, and the text of the policy is now being kept secret. Earlier
policies had been the result of a joint effort between the Sikh Coalition and
the Department of Transportation.
Since September 11, 2001, hundreds of Sikhs have been harassed, beaten,
and even killed because of the association of their turbans and beards with
terrorism. The TSA procedures put an official stamp of approval on this
harmful stereotyping by the public.