Sikhs say new TSA rules still allow profiling

c. 2008 Religion News Service WASHINGTON _ It is humiliating and demeaning. It is like being strip-searched. That is how some Sikhs describe their feelings when airport security guards pat down their turbans or tell them to remove the headgear, which is considered a religiously mandated article for Sikh men. In response to 32 civil […]

c. 2008 Religion News Service

WASHINGTON _ It is humiliating and demeaning. It is like being strip-searched.

That is how some Sikhs describe their feelings when airport security guards pat down their turbans or tell them to remove the headgear, which is considered a religiously mandated article for Sikh men.


In response to 32 civil rights violation complaints filed by the coalition last summer, the Transportation Security Administration and the New York-based Sikh Coalition worked together to create a new TSA policy that went into effect in October.

But since then, the coalition has received 78 additional complaints.

“There is still a lot of racial profiling going on,” said Neha Singh, advocacy director and staff attorney for the Sikh Coalition. “We are concerned with how the new policy is being implemented in different airports.”

Under the policy, Sikhs do not automatically have to remove their turbans, and they have the option to conduct the pat-down themselves.

A few of the 78 new complaints were egregious examples of discrimination, Singh said, but most were claims of mandatory turban checks.

“There seems to be confusion among the TSA workers,” Singh said. “It seems the waters have been muddied because the policy has changed several times.”

Most of the new complaints will be bundled into a quarterly report and given to the TSA, Singh said. The goal is for more civil rights advocacy and better implementation of the policy.

The TSA Office of Civil Rights did not return several calls for comment.

Some Sikhs, such as Prabhjit Singh, just want the random search to be random.

Prabhjit Singh, 27, of Germantown, Md., travels extensively for his work as a motivational speaker for real estate agencies. He is one of the original 32 complainants from last summer.

On a trip from Baltimore to Alabama in August, he passed through the metal detector without a problem but was told he was subject to a mandatory pat-down of his turban, according to the official complaint. When he informed the TSA workers that his rights were being violated, he said they became hostile and told him that he would not be traveling that day.


Prabhjit Singh eventually submitted to the pat-down and was allowed to travel, but not before being yelled at more by the TSA workers, he said.

“I just remember looking around on the plane,” he said, “and thinking how unfair. No one else had to go through what I just went through.”

When he traveled under the new policy last December, Prabhjit Singh again passed through the metal detector without problem but was asked to step to the side. He was allowed to pat down his own turban but believes he still was a victim of ethnic profiling.

“Every time I travel,” Prabhjit Singh said. “I know that I’m going to be searched, which would be fine if it was really random.”

KRE/LF END TROTTER500 words

A photo of Prabhjit Singh is available via https://religionnews.com.

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