The Welland Tribune

Thousands of air travellers flagged by Canada’s new security system

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Canada’s new security system for scrutinizi­ng people who arrive by airplane singled out more than 2,300 passengers for closer examinatio­n during a recent three-month period, the federal border agency says.

The Canada Border Services Agency says the travellers — flagged for possible links to terrorism or serious crime — represente­d a tiny fraction of the millions who flew into the country.

Still, privacy and civil liberties watchdogs want to know more about the border agency’s so-called scenario-based targeting system to ensure individual rights are not being trampled.

The agency has implemente­d the targeting system, already used by the United States, as part of Canada’s commitment to co-operate with Washington under the 2011 continenta­l security pact known as the Beyond the Border initiative.

Commercial airlines are legally bound to provide Canada’s border agency with specific informatio­n about passengers flying to Canada, including name, birthdate, citizenshi­p, seat number and other details.

The border agency has long used the informatio­n to assess people for risk, allowing officials to zero in on those with high scores for additional attention upon landing.

The new scenario-based scheme uses elaborate number-crunching, or Big Data analytics, to reveal patterns in the informatio­n provided by air carriers — a method the border agency considers more efficient and accurate.

Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien is pressing the border agency to explain the program’s rationale and build in safeguards to protect individual liberties. Travellers may be targeted if they fit the general attributes of a group due to traits they cannot change such as age, gender, nationalit­y, birthplace, or racial or ethnic origin, he warns.

In his recently released annual report, Therrien said “it could allow the operator to, for example, search for all males aged between the ages of 18-20 who are Egyptian nationals and who have visited both Paris and New York.”

The border agency declined to make anyone available to discuss the project. In written answers to questions, the agency said scenarios are “a generic set of indicators” that flow from analysis of intelligen­ce, enforcemen­t, trends and other informatio­n to identify passengers who “may pose a higher risk” due to concerns about national security, smuggling of contraband such as drugs, or illicit migration.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE/CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada’s new security system for scrutinizi­ng people who arrive by airplane singled out more than 2,300 passengers for closer examinatio­n during a recent three-month period, the federal border agency says.
DARREN CALABRESE/CANADIAN PRESS Canada’s new security system for scrutinizi­ng people who arrive by airplane singled out more than 2,300 passengers for closer examinatio­n during a recent three-month period, the federal border agency says.

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