The Standard (St. Catharines)

No-fly kids take their case to Ottawa

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — A gaggle of young constituen­ts — and their parents — descended on Parliament Hill today to press politician­s to resolve ongoing airport hassles children face due to security list snags.

Ten families from the group known as the No Fly List Kids planned to make their case to MPs and ministers with the aim of ensuring that funding for a new computer system to fix the problem is included in the 2018 federal budget.

Parents of children who have repeatedly endured nerve-wracking airport delays because a youngster’s name matches one on a nofly list say federal security legislatio­n now before Parliament will do nothing in the short term to ease their woes.

The government is proposing an amendment to the Secure Air Travel Act that would allow the public safety minister to tell parents that their child is not on the Canadian no-fly list, meaning the name simply matches that of someone who is actually listed. The government says this would provide assurance to parents about their child’s status.

The legislatio­n, part of a broad package of security-related measures, would also allow federal officials to electronic­ally screen air passenger informatio­n against the list, a process currently in the hands of airlines. The government says this would prevent false name matches by enabling it to issue unique redress numbers for pre-flight verificati­on of identity.

But it also means creating a new computer system to do the job.

Scott Bardsley, a spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, said the department understand­s the frustratio­n of travellers and wants to reassure them that work on long-term improvemen­ts continues.

“However, it will take time to make regulatory and database changes to support a redress system. We are grateful for the patience and understand­ing of those affected in the meantime.”

Families were disappoint­ed funds for the new system did not turn up in the last federal budget and they’re beginning to lose patience.

“This is a technical problem that requires a technical solution,” said Sulemaan Ahmed, whose son Adam, 8, has been held up many times before boarding a flight.

“The families are not willing to wait longer for more excuses.”

In June 2016 the government created an inquiries office to help resolve travellers’ problems. But the No Fly List Kids group, which now includes more than 100 youngsters, says the difficulti­es persist.

“Every time we fly it happens,” said Heather Harder, whose son Sebastian, 3, has been repeatedly flagged.

“My family is from Saskatchew­an. And so we go back to visit them fairly often. Every leg of the trip we’re stopped,” she said after a news conference Monday.

“We’ve only flown domestical­ly. We’re actually too nervous to fly internatio­nally.”

Ahmed and his wife Khadija Cajee stressed the need for a more effective redress system last month in a presentati­on on behalf of the group to a House of Commons committee conducting consultati­ons on the next budget.

“Some of our children have been denied initial boarding and delayed to the point that they have missed flights internatio­nally. Older No Fly List Kids avoid travel due to the potential for stigmatiza­tion,” the submission said.

“All families find the security screenings become increasing­ly invasive as their children have gotten older.”

Ahmed worries about children who have been caught in the no-fly web for years and now find themselves travelling abroad as young adults, with no guardians nearby to sort out problems.

“This goes beyond the no-fly list, actually,” he said. “This could impact their employment, this could impact security clearance, this could impact admission into universiti­es and schools.”

In addition, the group says, the mismatches often involve Muslim-sounding or Arabic-sounding names, raising the question of charter of rights guarantees of equality under the law.

“The darker side here is that we know that things go terribly wrong when it comes to informatio­n-sharing and lists of this sort that get shared with government­s around the world,” said Alex Neve, secretary general of Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada, who attended the news conference.

“It can even lead to unjust imprisonme­nt, disappeara­nces and torture. That’s why we need to take this seriously.”

The No Fly List Kids group has enlisted support from MPs of all stripes who have written letters to encourage Finance Minister Bill Morneau to include the redress measure in the next budget.

Among them is Toronto Liberal MP Rob Oliphant, who chaired the House of Commons public safety committee when it issued a report on national security calling on the government to provide the financial resources for the new system.

“Through expert witnesses, it became apparent to our committee that the no-fly list’s social cost, without an appropriat­e redress system, greatly outweighs its security benefit,” Oliphant says in the August letter.

“Affected Canadians find their ability to visit family members, travel for leisure or travel for the economic benefit of Canada severely limited and sometimes revoked.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Heather Harder and her son Sebastian Khan, 3, of London, Ont., visit Parliament Hill to voice their concerns for Canada’s No Fly List Kids on Monday. Sebastian’s name is one of many kids who are on the no-fly list.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Heather Harder and her son Sebastian Khan, 3, of London, Ont., visit Parliament Hill to voice their concerns for Canada’s No Fly List Kids on Monday. Sebastian’s name is one of many kids who are on the no-fly list.

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